The Citizen (Gauteng)

Clampdown on initiation schools

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A new Bill aimed at regulating customary male initiation is close to reaching parliament for processing, Deputy Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Oped Bapela said yesterday.

Briefing journalist­s on the department of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs budget, Bapela said the Bill would go a long way to reducing the number of deaths at initiation camps throughout the country.

“The main fundamenta­l intent of the law is one to empower the police and the National Prosecutin­g Authority to be able to arrest and prosecute those who are running illegal schools,” said Bapela.

“These [illegal initiation schools] in the main are found in urban centres … where traditiona­l leaders are not [in] charge and, therefore, you find people just do as they want.”

Scores of boys die every year due to dehydratio­n, gangrene and other complicati­ons, which government attributes to “flyby-night” operators who use the cultural practice to make a quick buck.

The Customary Initiation Bill would make provision for municipali­ties to help regulate the operations of initiation schools. Bapela said municipali­ties would be required to create a list of those opening up initiation schools, who would have to present their credential­s and would have to know the practice itself.

“The municipali­ties can then develop by-laws that can then begin to manage, control and make sure that whoever wants to practice, the spaces are identified and the by-laws are enacted in such a way that the conditions are hygienic, there’s water access and access to those particular places are in order, unlike where the people just go into forested areas, factories and mines dumps,” said Bapela.

This month, at least four initiates in Mpumalanga died. One of the boys was just 14 years old despite those younger than 16 are not being allowed to attend initiation schools in terms of the Mpumalanga Ingoma Act.

Education and awareness is also featured in the Bill as many young people attend initiation schools as a result of peer pressure, said Bapela.

“They don’t know the culture and when you ask them why they do it they say because their friends have done it, and it’s not linked to any cultural belief,” he said. – ANA

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