Sunday Times

No ID book, no food for ‘ghost pupils’

- PREGA GOVENDER

THOUSANDS of schools in three provinces are struggling financiall­y because they get no funding for pupils who do not have birth certificat­es or identity documents.

The Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Limpopo provincial education department­s are making payments to schools based on the number of pupils with valid documentat­ion, and not on the school’s total pupil enrolment.

This means schools are losing between R995 and R1 243 — depending on the province — for each child they enrol who does not have an ID.

The reason is to clamp down on “ghost” pupils. The auditor-general views payments for pupils without valid documentat­ion as fruitless expenditur­e.

Eastern Cape education spokesman Mali Mtima said his department was saving hundreds of millions of rands by withholdin­g the transfer of payments to pupils who did not have IDs, passports or study permits.

The Legal Resources Centre in Grahamstow­n said it planned to approach the high court to force the department to fund all pupils in a school.

Cecile van Schalkwyk, a candidate attorney at the LRC, said: “Schools are forced to redistribu­te their resources to fund all the learners . . . This has a particular­ly negative impact on school nutrition.”

She said there were several reasons pupils could not get documents: they could have been abandoned or orphaned, “or simply don’t have access to the documents required by the Department of Home Affairs”.

KwaZulu-Natal education department spokesman Muzi Mahlambi said: “We don’t want as a province to keep people who are illegal in the country . . . We must know if you can’t get an ID why you can’t get an ID.”

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