Uganda has a legal duty to regulate school fees and other dues in all schools.
Education is a right. Everyone has a right to Education according to Article 30 of our Constitution. The government of Uganda has an obligation under Articles 13 and 14 of the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), Article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Article 17 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights (ACHPR), Article 12 of the African Charter on the Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa (Maputo Protocol), Article 11 of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACRWC) and Article 30 of the Constitution, Sections 3 and 57, of the Education Act to ensure every Ugandan accesses free basic education and that education at other levels is accessible for all. Education is not a commodity to be left to best seller and willing buyer, it is a right and Uganda bears the sole responsibility to provide! This also means that Uganda can be held responsible for failure to provide the right to education under the above international and regional legal regimes.
We have had continuous cries way before COVID-19
for the government to regulate school fees and other unnecessary dues that are
burdensome on parents and children but all in vain. According to the Uganda
National Household Survey 2019-2020, 16% of the children did not attend school
because it was considered too expensive, and persons aged between 6-24 years,
43% boys and 41% girls have never attended school because of lack of funding
and schools not being affordable. This means that Government is failing
in its duty to ensure that children are keep in school by regulating school
fees. The Parliament of Uganda has on several occasions tasked the Ministry of
Education to intervene but all in vain. It seems that the ministry of education
has failed in its duty to regulate school fees and other dues. We also know
that some ministry officials own private schools and this is a direct conflict
of interest which perhaps points to their failure to reign in on schools. As a
country, we cannot continue to watch as our generation gets wasted simply
because they cannot afford school. We all owe a duty to our posterity;
therefore, it is in the interest of every Ugandan to demand that the ministry
reigns in and takes charge of the situation.
It is over 3 years now and the Government is
still promising to regulate school fees, other dues and unnecessary so called
school requirements. How can the Ministry, in this era allow schools to demand
that students must bring rugs, paint, cement, brooms, toilet paper, and rakes
among others as school requirements and at the same time pay functional fees on
top of school fees? The Ministry of Education seems to be sleeping on its job!
We need to see action being taken beyond issuing guidelines that have no legal
effect on the schools.
As a country, we must ensure that our citizenry
gets the best education it can so that we are able to support all sectors of
production. The Ministry of Education in any country is supposed to be the most
vibrant and action-oriented because education is the nervous system of the
country. For how long shall we beg the government to rein in on schools that
are charging exorbitant school fees and demanding outrageous school
requirements? For how long shall we beg the government to provide favorable
learning environments for learners and also prioritize the welfare of the
teachers?
I hope that the Government takes this seriously as
the education of its citizens as it is its primary responsibility to ensure
that everyone accesses education.
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