Cape Argus

‘Silent massacre’ of SA’s children is preventabl­e

Hundreds die as government department­s flounder in red tape

- Adrian Di Lollo and Rajendra Chetty

THE dismissal of a claim for about R3 million in damages brought against the Limpopo Department of Basic Education following the drowning of 5-year-old Michael Komape in a school pit latrine in 2014 has been greeted with dismay.

The failure to provide any financial relief to Michael’s family may be seen as symptomati­c of a wider failure to acknowledg­e the value of the lives of vulnerable, poor children and protect them accordingl­y.

About 900 children are murdered in South Africa every year on average, forsaken by the social workers, police and school officials mandated to protect them.

According to a 2017 South Africa Survey released by the Institute for Race Relations, about 10 000 children had been killed across the country in the previous decade.

Most of the children were killed in their homes, a place where their safety should be taken for granted. Children are also endangered in their schools, another space of so-called safety.

Earlier this month (on March 12), 5-year-old Lumka Mketwa fell into a pit latrine at Luna Primary in Bizana, in the Eastern Cape, and drowned. Both the school and the Department of Basic Education identified the deceased child wrongly as Viwe Jali, a clear violation of the respect to which children are entitled. Three days after Lumka’s death, another 5-year-old child died at Mutsha Primary School in Thondoni, Limpopo. The Grade R child was walking in the school premises, near the classrooms, when she was electrocut­ed by a loose electric wire.

The figure of 900 deaths a year represents a conservati­ve estimate of the toll since they exclude abandoned children whose deaths are not calculated as part of the crime statistics. The continuing high murder rate comes as co-ordination between the police and social workers – which is supposed to protect at-risk children from mounting abuse and violence under the 2005 Children’s Act –has almost completely disintegra­ted.

Social workers and police officers are failing to report crimes against children to each other despite the requiremen­ts of the act, which requires them to furnish such reports within 24 hours of the incident, according to research conducted by the Children’s Institute at UCT.

Meanwhile, provincial Department of Social Developmen­t (DSD) officials spent much of last year at their desks undertakin­g extensive paperwork on crèche registrati­ons instead of spending time in the field and collaborat­ing with their partners in the police service.

As a result, children in South Africa continue to die preventabl­e, unnatural deaths, many of them in their own homes, in what has been called a “silent massacre of children”. At-risk families where abuse of, and violence against, children is most likely to occur are not being properly identified at an early stage so that appropriat­e action and support can be provided to protect them – with often fatal consequenc­es, according to a Child Death Review (CDR) project being co-ordinated by the Children’s Institute.

The Department of Social Developmen­t’s executives have failed to live up to their legal responsibi­lities in this regard – because they expect social workers to spend much of their precious time filling in forms and overseeing the cumbersome registrati­on requiremen­ts for early childhood developmen­t centres (crèches); reviewing proposals and reports from non-profit organisati­ons (NPOs) applying for funding; and, in KwaZulu-Natal, overseeing time-consuming foster-care cases, which entail much paperwork and many hours in court.

Also, social workers often face crucial equipment shortages. In one area of the Eastern Cape, 40 social workers share one department­al vehicle between them.

Children are being placed at undue risk by a failure of implementa­tion rather than policy. In fact, South African children should be among the safest in the world, given the extensive rights granted to them under the constituti­on and the government’s ratificati­on of key global and regional treaties such as the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).

The failure is one of implementa­tion, in particular, in the inadequate co-ordination between the two agencies at the forefront of child protection, whose collaborat­ion is of paramount importance: the SAPS and provincial department­s of Social Developmen­t.

The Children’s Act mandates interactio­n between these agencies to ensure joint management of cases and the provision of critical care, protection and law-enforcemen­t services.

However, a 2017 study conducted by the Children’s Institute found that, among the 258 child protection cases sampled in five Department of Social Developmen­t district offices across the country, only two were worked on jointly by police and the department.

The study further found that some offices were dealing with few, if any, child abuse cases, despite high levels of reported abuse.

For example, in the Eastern Cape, two local department offices serving one of the largest townships in the country was found to have handled only one reported case of child abuse over a three-month period, although the local SAPS Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences Unit was dealing with many child abuse cases during this time.

It is a travesty that the public authoritie­s mandated to protect the nation’s most at-risk children have turned their profession­al social workers into desk-bound bureaucrat­s. Many of the assessment­s and facility inspection­s, and much of the report writing, accreditat­ion administra­tion, contract management and paralegal work that they undertake could be performed by well-trained, experience­d mainstream civil servants instead.

At present, the child protection system in South Africa prioritise­s paperwork and bureaucrat­ic processes over vital social work interventi­ons that would save the lives of children. This needs to be reversed.

In a well-functionin­g child protection system, social workers need to be active in the field, not only responding to reports of child abuse and neglect but working to strengthen at-risk families; undertakin­g community education; and forming critical child protection networks with community leaders, churches, schools and other government and civil society institutio­ns that would help in both preventing and addressing child abuse and neglect.

In this regard, it is therefore heartening to note that the department­s of Social Developmen­t in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape have begun to adopt measures to free their social workers to undertake child protection work. This must become a top priority for every provincial department in the country.

SOUTH AFRICAN CHILDREN SHOULD BE AMONG THE SAFEST IN THE WORLD, GIVEN THE EXTENSIVE RIGHTS GRANTED TO THEM

Chetty is professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of the Western Cape and Di Lollo is a researcher in the Literacy and Poverty Research Unit at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology.

 ?? PICTURE: HENK KRUGER/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? AT RISK: Children from Athlone School for the Blind in Bellville play at the blind-friendly park in a field close to the school. Many children fall foul of a system that diverts social workers from their core duties, says the writer.
PICTURE: HENK KRUGER/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) AT RISK: Children from Athlone School for the Blind in Bellville play at the blind-friendly park in a field close to the school. Many children fall foul of a system that diverts social workers from their core duties, says the writer.

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