Editorial Cartoon.
As reported in our paper yesterday, more of the schools have been
closed because their food suppliers have not been paid their dues for a
long time.
However, the government denied this fact, insisting that no school had sent students back home as a result of the problem.
Nonetheless, the fact of the matter is that even on Monday at least
five such schools in Kagera Region had to send students home after
food suppliers suspended services demanding payment of their outstanding
bills.
Confirming the payments made by the government was none other than
the Permanent Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office-Regional
Administration and Local Government (Tamisemi), Jumanne Sagini,
hiimself.
He said from July last year to last month, March, the government
had paid the food suppliers each month without fail. As a matter of
fact, he emphasised, in March it paid food suppliers a total of 8.4
billion/-, he told reporters.
We think that this seesaw does no one any good and, in fact, it is
like washing one’s dirty linen in public. For, it is a fact that
students have been sent home by heads of their schools because there is
no food.
How could they go to classes or sleep in their dormitories on empty
stomachs? Given this scenario, we think it was right for school heads
to send them home.
The only mistake may be that the heads did not consult their bosses
at the Ministry of Education and Vocational Training headquarters
before taking that action.
But the fact remains that food suppliers had not been paid their
dues for the food they had supplied to the schools. We tend to believe
this fact because the school heads are sane enough not to send the
students home for no reason.
It is well known that the government is indebted by many
individuals and companies. This is notwithstanding the fact that if one
wants to do good business, then he/she should do it with the government.
The government has all it takes for doing good business. Think of
how many educational institutions, roads, bridges, buildings and other
structures that it owns…the list is endless.
All these need to be serviced, but the government cannot do this
all alone. It has to find assistance from somewhere, and thus the need
to provide tenders to individuals and firms.
But winning a tender for providing services to government
institutions requires one to have sufficient capital. This is mainly
because of the red-tape (and corruption) involved in the process.
Worse still, payments from the government take very long; in fact
too long that an individual or firm with small capital may end up being
bankrupt.
We think this is what has happened with suppliers of food to the
boarding secondary schools who claim not to have been paid their dues.
The government should come out in the open and tell us the truth
surrounding this saga
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