The Citizen (KZN)

Child’s pit toilet death lambasted

EDUCATION MINISTER ‘IS RESPONSIBL­E’ Rights body says constructi­on targets at schools are not being realised.

- Yadhana Jadoo

The education department must answer for the tragic death of fiveyear-old Viwe Jali who fell into a pit latrine at a school at Luna Primary school in Bizana, Eastern Cape.

This is the SA Human Rights Commission’s (SAHRC’s) demand following the horrific incident, which comes just three years after the preventabl­e death of fiveyear-old Michael Komape, who also died following his fall into a pit toilet.

The SAHRC has initiated a province-wide investigat­ion into the incident and President Cyril Ramphosa has given Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga a month to audit all hazardous school structures. She must then come up with a fixable plan.

“President Ramaphosa has directed Motshekga to conduct an audit of all learning facilities with unsafe structures, especially unsafe ablution facilities, within a month, and to present him with a plan to rectify the challenges, as an emergency interim measure, while rolling out proper infrastruc­ture, within three months,” his office said.

Civil society would also be consulted, said the presidency, on the eliminatio­n of unsafe infrastruc­ture at the country’s schools.

“The death of Viwe is devastatin­g for her community and the country. The nation still mourns the loss of young Michael Komape under similar tragic circumstan­ces in 2014.

“In memory of these young souls, President Ramaphosa has committed government to spare no effort in ensuring that our children can learn in safe and conducive facilities,” the rights commission said.

The SAHRC condemned the reoccurren­ce and the state’s failure to eradicate pit toilets.

“The fact that the education sector still reflects the stark disparitie­s of historic deprivatio­n, with thousands of schools lacking the most basic infrastruc­ture necessary to ensure the safety and dignity of pupils, is shocking and cannot be tolerated. The provincial department will be called to publicly account for the state of infrastruc­ture in schools across the province,” it said.

“If we are going to achieve the vision promised by the Constituti­on – a society premised on equality and dignity – and where we purport to protect the most vulnerable, we need to carefully scrutinise the adequacy of measures taken to realise fundamenta­l rights,” the SAHRC said.

It noted with concern the department of Basic Education has vastly underachie­ved on targets set for the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of infrastruc­ture – yadhanaj@citizen.co.za; additional reporting ANA

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