By Vusumuzi Sifile
A top United States envoy last week said the current situation in Zimbabwe was discouraging many students from applying their education to the development of the country.
Speaking on Thursday last week at an orientation of a group of students awarded undergraduate scholarships to study at various American universities, the Deputy US Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Katherine Dhanani, said many students "see no future" in Zimbabwe. The students will be leaving the country next month.
"Today, too may of Zimbabwe’s brightest students, after they complete their studies, see no future for themselves applying their learning back home in Zimbabwe," Dhanani told the students.
Most of the students were assisted in their applications by the United States Achievers Programme (USAP).
"I am quite sure that one element of Zimbabweans’ aspirations for their future is for the nation to once again become a country to which students hurry back after graduation. A country in which their education is a major force for development, and a country in which returning students feel their contribution is valued and rewarded."
Dhanani commended the students for achieving so much under difficult conditions. A number of students were affected by the government’s Operation Murambatsvina in 2005. Their plight was worsened by the mass exodus of teachers from schools and the economic challenges facing most ordinary Zimbabweans.
"It’s quite an achievement that you have reached this point. I would like to congratulate you for your excellent results which earned you acceptance," she said. "Your achievement is all the more impressive given the difficulties of the last years and especially of recent months."
First published in The Standard, 20 July 2008
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