Zimbabwe's education ministry just hammered schools for forcing parents to buy overpriced uniforms on campus, calling the practice straight-up illegal and ordering complaints be filed immediately.
The ministry's stance on uniform purchasing freedom
The ministry's stance on uniform purchasing freedom
- Taungana Ndoro, Director of Communications and Advocacy, delivered the warning at a Bulawayo meeting.
- Parents can buy school uniforms from any supplier as long as the color codes match.
- Schools cannot make uniform purchases a condition for student enrollment or placement.
- The minister already announced the policy on television to make it crystal clear.
- Thekwane High School is currently under investigation for alleged uniform coercion tactics.
- Ndoro argued that schools' manufacturing uniforms compete with the market but can't create monopolies.
- Parents will naturally choose cheaper options if blazers cost 35 dollars elsewhere versus 45 at school.
- Forcing purchases of uniforms or stationery directly from institutions violates the law.
- Communities must report cases through the ministry's district offices for proper action.
- Parents shouldn't suffer in silence when schools break uniform purchasing rules.
- The policy mainly applies to public schools under government oversight.
- Officials will address grievances appropriately once complaints are formally submitted.
- Private schools operate under their own contractual arrangements with parents outside public systems.
- Families signing contracts with non-government schools enter private civil agreements voluntarily.
- The ministry can't intervene if parents don't read the fine print before signing deals.
- Private institutions still face ministry oversight on fee approvals and travel authorizations, though.