*Malawi school pupils denounce Banda.

If small kids can see through the IMF nonsense, Imperialism's Con men like
Kashambuzi should take note. * [image:
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1<http://www.herald.co.zw/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=68061:malawi-school-pupils-denounce-banda&catid=45:international-news&Itemid=137#>
  Thursday, 21 February 2013 21:48
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BLANTYRE. — Business came to a standstill in the central business district
of commercial capital Blantyre yesterday morning when school kids from
different primary schools in the city took to the streets singing
anti-Joyce Banda songs. Clad in their school uniforms, the children were
running in the streets causing traffic jams while singing that “Mayi
achoke!” and “Tikhoza bwanji mayeso tisakuphunzira”.
The children marched to Sanjika Palace just minutes after President Joyce
Banda left the country for Equitorial Gunea for the third Africa-South
America summit.
People watched as the pupils pulled down tree branches with others lying
flat on their tummies on the road causing vehicles to stop.
Police in full riot gear were seen coming from Mount Soche Hotel looking
for the kids, who by this time had already taken the route to Sanjika
Palace and they were jeered by on lookers.
“Do they want to teargas these little kids honestly? This is very
embarrassing because you cannot say that these kids have been sent by
politicians to demonstrate. I wonder how these policemen will handle this
situation,” wondered one onlooker.
“The sad thing is that the President has left the country without sorting
out this mess. If kids like this are demonstrating against you, just know
that things are not going on well. This is very embarrassing!” added
another on looker.
Surprisingly vendors and other older people did not join in the
demonstrations, probably flabbergasted that even kids are aware that all is
not well in the country.
Civil servants who include teachers are staging a strike demanding better
pay and good working conditions.
In Lilongwe, police had to use teargas to disperse the pupils who took to
the streets.
And on Wednesday, the irate pupils stoned school buildings belonging to the
President Banda Foundation in protest against public teachers’ boycott of
classes.
The police had to intervene and block gates as pupils from Chimwankhunda
and Zingwangwa primary schools stoned Joyce Banda Foundation School
buildings, chanting that they wanted equal education in public and private
schools.
Teachers in public schools in Malawi joined the civil servants strike on
Monday, demanding a 67 percent pay hike.
According to a group of pupils, who were protesting, their teachers
abandoned classes almost a week ago and they were tired of not learning.
In a related development, all airports in Malawi have been forced to shut
down following the wage strike by civil servants.
Both domestic and international flights were cancelled, said the BBC’s
Raphael Tenthani in the main city, Blantyre.
Passengers flying on South African Airways (SAA), Kenya Airways and
Ethiopian Airlines were stranded on Wednesday, he added.
The indefinite strike, affecting nearly all government departments, is the
biggest since Mrs Joyce Banda became president last year.
Most of Malawi’s estimated 120 000 civil servants — including teachers and
immigration officers — are on strike demanding wage increases to counter
the rising cost of living, our correspondent says.
Workers complain that since the government devalued the local currency, the
kwacha, by 49 percent in May last year, their incomes have been badly
affected.
Yesterday, Finance Minister Ken Lipenga said the government could not
afford to increase wage costs, Reuters news agency reported.
Trade unions are demanding a 65 percent wage increase, about double the
inflation rate, it said.
“Currently our wage bill is 97 billion kwacha (US$277 million), and if we
agree to their demands, this will almost triple to 276 billion kwacha,
which is equivalent to the whole national budget,” Mr Lipenga was quoted as
saying.
The strike started last week, but it has since escalated. Nurses and
doctors have also threatened to join the strike.
Workers held protests, chanting anti-government slogans such as “Joyce
Banda, in 2014 you are not going to see my vote”, said the BBC report.
It will be the first election Mrs Banda will contest since she took power
following the unexpected death of her predecessor, Bingu wa Mutharika, in
April 2012.
The latter part of Mutharika’s rule was marred by widespread protests about
the rising cost of living and fuel shortages.
An AFP report says police later used tear gas to disperse the marching
primary school pupils.
“Police fired tear gas to bring peace,” Nicholas Gondwa told AFP.
The police said the they were forced to fire tear gas at the protest
because it had been hijacked by hooligans.
“Criminals took advantage of the demonstrations by the pupils and broke
into a filling station shop and looted goods,” he said.
Gondwa said the pupils waved tree branches and blocked roads with boulders.
Derek Phiri, a 13-year-old pupil at Blantyre Boys near Ndirande, the
country’s largest shantytown, said the children were “simply holding a
peaceful march to send a message to the president that she must resolve the
strike by the civil servants because it affects us as well.”
Tear gas was also fired at a group of children from five schools earlier
when they tried to march to the presidential palace in the administrative
capital Lilongwe, witnesses said.— Nyasa Times/bbc.co.uk/AFP.
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