The Citizen (KZN)

Toilet death blame game

‘OTHER DEPARTMENT­S ARE AT FAULT FOR SERVICES, NOT US’ ‘Finger-pointing is not going to solve infants dying of lack of infrastruc­ture’.

- Chisom Jenniffer Okoye and Magnificen­t Mndebele news@citizen.co.za

The education department has shifted blame for poor infrastruc­ture in schools onto the finance, and water and sanitation department­s, following the death of five-yearold Viwe Jali, who tragically died after falling into a pit toilet.

The department’s comments come after Education Minister Angie Motshekga told media this week that they were doing their best to deal with what is a “sectoral problem”.

Following Viwe’s death, which comes just three years after little Michael Komape died in the same way, President Cyril Ramaphosa instructed Mothshekga to conduct an infrastruc­ture audit at all schools.

Viwe Jali died at her school in Bizana, Eastern Cape, while little Michael died at his school in Chebeng village, Limpopo.

Motshekga said the audit was a collective effort of relevant people including various MECs, department heads and other relevant officials responsibl­e for infrastruc­ture from all provinces.

However, department spokespers­on Elijah Mahlangu blamed the department of water and sanitation for not having provided services to the area. “Don’t expect the department of education or the minister of education to solve water and sanitation problems if the department of water and sanitation has not brought such services [to] the area,” he said. “If the community does not have running water, then you cannot expect the school to have running water,” Mahlangu said.

“It hurts when people blame you for electricit­y which Eskom was supposed to provide and hasn’t provided in the school.”

Water and sanitation spokespers­on Sputnik Ratau called Mahlangu’s comments “problemati­c”.

He said the issue of infrastruc­ture at schools remained the department of education’s responsibi­lity.

“And the pit toilet for example, is not an issue of whether there was water or not, it is an issue of the kind of infrastruc­ture that has been provided...

“But ultimately, we will all have to work together, and [it is] not about pointing fingers at each other because we are talking about the lives of children,” said Ratau.

Mahlangu took further jabs at the finance department for lack of funding. –

Water and sanitation should have been provided

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