Twitter The Herald La Femme Weekend Post News Feed News Break
Sunscribe to The Herald Port Elizabeth eEdition Online News
Breaking News Special Reports Latest Galleries Lifestyle Service Directory Classifieds

Limpopo textbook delivery 'deadline missed'

16 July 2012
The basic education department failed to comply with a court order to meet its textbook delivery deadline, legal NGO Section27 said on Monday (16/07/2012).

"On the first day of a new [school] term, there is a risk that many learners still remain without textbooks or with insufficient textbooks,” Section27 executive director Mark Heywood said in Johannesburg.

He was briefing reporters on a report on the late delivery of textbooks in Limpopo.

"We accept that all... figures [in the report] require further verification. But on these facts the department of basic education remains in violation of the court order. This needs very urgent remedy.” The report, by former education director general Mary Metcalfe, found that despite the extended date for the delivery of textbooks, June 27, the department’s assertion that 98 percent of the books were delivered was partially incorrect.

"Professor Metcalfe’s report shows that on 27th June, only 15 percent of books had been delivered to schools. By July 3 this had increased to 48 percent. According to the report, by July 11, 22 percent of the sample schools were still awaiting textbooks,” Heywood said.

Section27 accepted the recommendations made by Metcalfe in the report, and called for their "urgent implementation”.

"It is very clear from this and other reports that the Limpopo education department is rotten, riven (rife) with corruption and incapable of meeting its constitutional obligation to learners,” Heywood said.

"We call for the department to be cleaned out, for the vigorous prosecution of charges of corruption, for maximum openness about those charged, and for the [Limpopo] MEC for basic education, Dickson Masemola, to be fired.” He said the ”crisis” not was Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga’s sole responsibility.

Basic education spokesman Panyaza Lesufi said the department accepted the report and would work to implement its recommendations.

"We await further reports to make an accurate assessment on the matter. We are going to Limpopo to count each and every learner and teacher to ensure that this situation does not happen again.” Section27 had taken the department to court to force it to deliver the books, after some schools in the province had been without them for seven months.

The Metcalfe report was compiled in response to the department’s assertion that 98 percent of the books were delivered.

A presidential task team and the Limpopo government were also conducting their own investigations into the situation, which had been accompanied by media reports of textbook dumping, irregular ordering and tender processes. - Sapa





Reader's Comments

Report Abuse Author: TheRef Date: 16 July 2012 16:50

Well you don`t have to be the sharpest tool in the shed to realise the whole ANC set up is a dismal failure it`s actually quite laughable!

Media Center
Visit Our Youtube Channel
View MoreTop Stories: News
East Cape teachers paid: Department Minister confirms troop deployment to CAR Mandla loses battle Security guard dies in botched cash heist 'Kids now gang targets' No recourse for long-haul bus passengers Paramedic qualifies as helicopter pilot DA councillors 'assaulted official' Teachers paid after court action Future of plundered daycare centre assured

News Categories

News Sport LifeStyle Letters World
Comment on this article via Facebook
The Herald Port Elizabeth - Inspired by Times Media Group The Herald Port Elizabeth Digital Media & Marketing Association

All material copyright The Herald. © Times Media Group. All Rights Reserved.

Subscribe | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | News | Archives | Events | Blogs | Classifieds | About Us | Jobs | Herald Rates | WeekendPost Rates

Website development and design by Online Innovations