Kenya to make high school education free
May 02 2007 at 12:54AM
By Jeremy Clarke
Nairobi - Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki on Tuesday promised free public secondary school tuition from next year, following on his re-introduction of free primary education into east Africa's largest economy.
Kibaki, facing a tough re-election campaign before polls set for December, said his decision was part of a greater plan to see Kenya boost its global competitiveness by 2030.
"From January 2008, my government will meet the cost of tuition in all public secondary schools, at a cost of 4.3-billion Kenya shillings (about R450-million))," he said in a Labour Day speech at Nairobi's Uhuru Park.
'This will create a large pool of employable young people'
In 2003, Kibaki's re-introduction of free primary schooling won local and international plaudits and saw the number of pupils jump by 1,2 million in just weeks.
Primary school used to be free in Kenya, but was phased out as Kenya's economy collapsed under the rule of former president - and one-time schoolteacher - Daniel arap Moi.
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Kibaki's latest education push will only cover the cost of tuition, leaving parents responsible for costs like books, transport and school supplies.
Kibaki said his changes will extend basic education in Kenya from eight years to 12 years and focus domestic policy on youth vocational training.
"This will create a large pool of employable young people, while inculcating a strong work ethic in our youth that will serve them and our nation well in the years ahead," he said.
Across Africa parents make proportionately huge sacrifices to give their children basic education, with poor families spending between a quarter and a third of income on education, experts say.