Torched schools yet to be fixed in Vuwani

03 May 2018 - 14:19 By Timeslive
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Desks are left burnt to ashes at Maligana Wilson Secondary School in Mashau on April 03, 2016 in Limpopo, South Africa. About 17 schools in the area were burnt down in the Malamulele-Vuwani area, allegedly by disgruntled residents protesting against demarcation. File photo.
Desks are left burnt to ashes at Maligana Wilson Secondary School in Mashau on April 03, 2016 in Limpopo, South Africa. About 17 schools in the area were burnt down in the Malamulele-Vuwani area, allegedly by disgruntled residents protesting against demarcation. File photo.
Image: Gallo Images / Sowetan / Sandile Ndlovu

Only eight out of 31 schools that were damaged during the 2016 violent protests in Vuwani have been repaired.

Violence erupted in Vuwani after the Municipal Demarcation Board recommended that Malamulele and Vuwani municipalities be merged. Schools were torched and learning ground to a halt‚ affecting about 30,000 pupils.

In a written reply to the DA‚ the Department of Education has confirmed that R177-million was allocated in the 2016/2017 financial year towards schools damaged by storms and to address protest-related incidents. But only eight out of the 31 schools had been refurbished and rebuilt‚ according to the department.

“The DA can confirm that the Department of Public Works‚ Roads and Infrastructure has conducted an assessment that estimated the damages to all 31 schools was worth R177.5-million but the assessment report further indicated that the upgrades and maintenance required in the same schools including the riot damages amounted to R462-million‚” said DA MPL Jacques Smalle in a statement on Thursday.

“The contract for these projects were awarded on February 15 2017 but it’s extremely astonishing that a year on‚ only eight schools were attended to.”

The party said it would ask the department for an explanation of how the budgeted money was spent‚ what plans there were to provide funds to repair all the schools and how long it would take to rebuild them.


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