Mail & Guardian

Schools may get national key point status

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The South African Police Service said it was taken by surprise when schools in Vuwani were set on fire. If that is true, it shouldn’t be, the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) said on Thursday.

“When viewed objectivel­y they should have been aware of the imminent attacks,” the SAHRC said in a 60-page report — formally titled the SAHRC Report on National Investigat­ive Hearing into the Impact of Protest-related Action on the Right to a Basic Education in South Africa.

Instead of protecting schools, police were deployed to other key points, including infrastruc­ture designated under the National Key Points Act — an apartheid relic that allowed the government to demand the addition of security features at privately owned sites while making the owners pay.

Is the solution then to declare schools national key points?

So reasons the department of basic education, police told the SAHRC, and it was already in the process of attempting just that.

The SAHRC is not convinced. “This issue is fraught with chal- lenges,” it said. “For example, the law governing national key points would require additional security measures be put in place, and providing this level of protection to all the schools in South Africa would have serious fiscal implicatio­n.

“Furthermor­e, national key points may not be photograph­ed and taking such a stance with respect to schools, which are in essence public spaces, would create serious legal implicatio­ns, potentiall­y resulting in many people failing to adhere to this legal requiremen­t,” the commission said.

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