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2021.06.12 01:27 GMT+8

No plans at the moment to close schools in South Africa

Updated 2021.06.12 01:27 GMT+8
CGTN

A learner checking her temperature at school. /Xinhua

South Africa's Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga says her department does not have any plans at the moment to close schools. The Minister says those that are planning to shut down schools forcefully will be dealt with by law enforcement.

On the site visit to various schools in Limpopo, Motshekga says parents are the only ones who can decide on whether their children report to school or not.

The Minister says primary schools will welcome learners at full capacity when schools re-open for the third term.

"That is what they exist for, to oppose anything that government does. It is never here nor there. To me, what matters is the teachers, it is the parents; not them. You can't rely on them, otherwise, you won't do anything; it is their work. That is why they are called opposition parties."

"If parents feel they want to hold their kids, no problem; but if parents want their children to come to school, the law enforcement agency has to come to keep people from being disrupted to access their rights. It is out of my control. Mine is that on the 26th if everything is fine, kids are going back to school."

On Thursday, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema said he believes that all schools in the country have 7 days to close to save lives or face a forceful shutdown.

He said the country is now in the third wave of COVID-19 infections and should be concerned about the lives of learners. Infections have been increasing with the country recording more than nine thousand coronavirus cases in the last reporting period.

Malema said if schools don't close, children will die.

"So, schools must close and they must close with immediate effect because our children are going to die. We give the Minister seven days to close the schools. Failure to do so, we'll have to close schools ourselves as the EFF because we are not going to allow our children to die; we are not going to allow that. It was so painful to lose elderly people, the first wave and the second wave were the most painful thing. Imagine now when we have to go and bury kids?"

(With input from agencies)

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