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Matric cheat nabbed

- LATOYA NEWMAN latoya.newman@inl.co.za

AN ALLEGED matric cheat has been caught at a school in KwaZulu-Natal.

On October 31, a vigilant invigilato­r at a school in Newcastle noticed that an ID photo did not match that of the person writing the exam.

With the exams now into their third week, education officials issued a stern warning against cheating.

Aside from a five-year ban, criminal charges will be laid against offenders, the department warned.

Muzi Mahlambi, head of communicat­ions at the KZN Department of Education, said: “The invigilato­r noticed someone sitting on behalf of the candidate who was supposed to be sitting as a part-time candidate. This matter has been reported to the SAPS.”

In the Newcastle matter, both the 19-year-old who sat in for the pupil and the matric pupil were arrested and are facing charges of fraud.

Mahlambi said no other incidents had been reported or detected in KZN to date.

“Cheating is a very serious offence in the examinatio­n. It puts pupils and teachers in a serious situation. Results can be withheld, pupils can be barred from writing exams for five years, they could be arrested and educators could be fired,” he said.

During a media briefing at the start of the National Senior Certificat­e finals, the Ministry of Basic Education said more than 717 377 matric pupils would sit for their final examinatio­ns across 6 898 centres in the country.

A total of 207 question papers, 72 500 invigilato­rs and 52 500 markers would drive the examinatio­n process. The exams end on December 5.

Umalusi approved all the question papers to be administer­ed in the October/November 2023 exams, and Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga said security measures had been enhanced to prevent paper leaks in all provinces, with the State Security Agency having audited the processes.

Among other subjects, week four of the exams, November 20 to 24, will see pupils sit for Life Sciences Paper 2 and Electrical Technology on Monday; Geography Paper 2 on Tuesday; isiZulu (Home Language, First Additional Language and Second Additional Language, Paper 2) and South African Sign Language (Home Language, Paper 2) on Wednesday; isiZulu (Home Language, First Additional Language and Second Additional Language, Paper 2) and Tourism, as well as Nautical Science Paper 1 on Thursday; and Accounting Paper 2 and Agricultur­al Sciences Paper 1 on Friday.

◆ For the full exam timetable, see www. education.gov.za (click on the link “Curriculum” and then “National Senior Certificat­e (NSC) Examinatio­ns”).

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