Teachers at "Pavarësia" school hold two-hour protest today

The Trade Union Association of ShFMU "Pavarësia", the School's Steering Council and the Parents' Council have announced that today, 10.02.2026, at 08:00, all teachers will be present at school, but there will be no classes in the first two hours, as a protest will be held.
The school further announces that the teaching process will continue regularly after the end of the first two hours, namely from the third hour, according to the regular schedule, while the afternoon shift will develop the educational process normally, according to the scheduled schedule.
"The purpose of this protest is to react against delinquent actions of students in the educational process, including physical violence, insults, insults and curses against teachers. These actions seriously violate the professional authority, safety and dignity of teachers, and harm the smooth running of the educational process," the announcement states.
The school further emphasizes that this is not an isolated case, but a worrying phenomenon that is occurring in many schools.
"Through this protest, we aim to raise our voice against this phenomenon and demand serious institutional and social commitment to prevent and treat it responsibly," the announcement states.
Otherwise, the United Union of Education, Science and Culture (SBASHK) has also reacted to this.
SBASHK has expressed deep concern about the physical attack on a teacher at the "Pavarësia" School in Pristina, as well as the repeated cases of insults and verbal attacks on teachers by students and, in some cases, by parents.
SBASHK emphasizes that these incidents cannot be treated as isolated cases, as violence and disrespect towards teachers seriously violate the dignity of the profession and the safety of the educational process.
In support of demanding immediate response and concrete measures from the relevant institutions, SBASHK supported the two-hour strike organized by the "Pavarësia" School Union, which will take place on February 10, 2026. /Telegraph/



















































