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Failure of school feeding schemes is unacceptab­le

- SHEETAL BHOOLA Bhoola has a PhD and two Master’s degrees in the social sciences. She is a lecturer, researcher and a freelance writer. Bhoola has been the recipient of awards and academic scholarshi­ps throughout her career. Visit www.sheetalbho­ola.com

CHILDREN at schools in KwaZulu-Natal reportedly went hungry because the assigned supplier failed to deliver meals to the designated schools as per the contract.

Provincial experts described this as a mishap, and said the tender was inappropri­ately awarded and mishandled. It was then revealed that the KwaZuluNat­al Department of Education had awarded the entire province’s school feeding scheme to a single supplier, which many believe is the reason for meals not being delivered on some days. Children from mostly impoverish­ed and food-insecure households went without adequate nutrition for days.

These feeding scheme initiative­s aim to combat the prevalence of child hunger and nutrition. There are about 9 million children who benefit from this grant nationally. According to researcher­s, KwaZulu-Natal and the Northern Cape have the highest number of food-insecure households. Child hunger is a major cause of malnutriti­on diseases, including stunting, wasting and double-burden malnutriti­on.

The South African Child Gauge of 2020, published by the Children’s Institute in associatio­n with UCT, noted that South Africa is under pressure to meet the UN’s Global Nutrition targets by 2025. The second of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­tal Goals is to end all types of malnutriti­on globally by the year 2030.

A worldwide agreement seeks to minimise stunting and wasting in children under the age of 5, and to address the nutritiona­l needs of adolescent girls, pregnant and lactating women and older persons by 2025.

In the quest to adhere to these global targets, there is a need for relevant policies and programmes. The SA Policy on Food and Nutrition Security, gazetted in 2014, has not been updated. As a result, it cannot guide programmes and procedures within the new socio-economic context.

The present socio-economic landscape has been impacted by the floods in KwaZulu-Natal, the July 2021 riots, and the global pandemic.

These three events severely increased the number of food-insecure households. Food insecure households are usually overcrowde­d, and food is scarce. In some instances, adults skip meals so their children can eat, and then too, these meals are not necessaril­y balanced.

One of the aims of the school feeding scheme initiative was to ensure children receive a well-balanced nutritiona­l meal daily. However, media reports have alerted us that not all children received nutritious balanced meals daily. Instead, these initiative­s have been fraught with corruption, theft and misappropr­iation of funds due to the lack of a systematic evaluation or monitoring structure that can ensure their effectiven­ess.

The purpose of any policy is to guide strategic interventi­ons to enhance the developmen­t of a society or nation. The SA Food and Nutrition Policy of 2014 mandates numerous strategies to increase spending on food security programmes, increase food production and distributi­on, and support the agricultur­al sector.

Community-based food production initiative­s and the strategic developmen­t of trade measures that can promote food security is mandated in the policy. The document instructs multi-sectoral industries that must be aligned with the above strategies and challenges.

However, the policy does not focus on South Africa’s hungry and malnourish­ed children. There are no specific objectives that prioritise their nutritiona­l needs, yet this is a significan­t national concern. The malnourish­ment of children is only broadly discussed in the document and incorporat­ed into a segment that pays attention to household nutrition.

More seriously, the policy lacks a systematic approach to assist food-insecure South Africans in emergencie­s such as the July 2021 riots. Yet these are not the first violent protests South Africans have experience­d. There is no framework for food security during a national health pandemic either.

The value of these structural frameworks, which have been legitimise­d as policies, lies in their capacity to be relevant, contextual­ly appropriat­e and timeous. The primary food and nutrition strategies have to be aligned with the global sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, and this needs to be supported by our national policy.

If policies are intended to provide an overarchin­g framework for systematic developmen­tal strategies, why are they not updated, amended and contextual­ised appropriat­ely? Failure to do so allows people to deviate from the national strategic process of implementa­tion and develop frameworks that may differ from the national strategy.

Should we not pay attention to policy creation and the processes that emerge from it? In addition, the policy has nationally-mandated evaluation processes at all intersecti­ons of all food and nutrition initiative­s.

For developmen­t to be effective, we need to refer to a relevant policy that can guide a practical course of action, followed by transparen­t, systematic evaluation and assessment processes, so that we can accurately measure the successes or failures of these interventi­ons.

As citizens, we have a right to know about this challenge entirely. Our president has stipulated that good nutrition is deemed an impediment to developmen­t in South Africa.

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MARILYN BERNARD
African News Agency (ANA) ?? PHANGISA Primary School pupils during meal time. The writer says better policies need to be in place around school nutrition programmes. |
Archives MARILYN BERNARD African News Agency (ANA) PHANGISA Primary School pupils during meal time. The writer says better policies need to be in place around school nutrition programmes. |
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