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Prof Tshilidzi Marwala on jobs of the future, being number one and the Auckland Park education precinct

South Africa’s higher education institutions are marred with multiple challenges including soaring student debt, budget cuts, the issue of colonial education and graduate unemployment but for one man, these issues are not insurmountable.

Inside Education interviewed Vice-Chancellor and Principal for the University of Johannesburg (UJ) Professor Tshilidzi Marwala in his boardroom at UJ main campus this week.

“I think the Chinese are very important,” said Marwala and places two books on the table, China’s President Xi Jinping’s book, The Governance of China III and Professor Adekeye Adebajo’s book, The Trial of Cecil John Rhodes.

“Technologically, the Chinese are very important. They are basically the factory floor for the entire world with all sorts of implications for our own country where we do not make anything. We make very few things. This shirt is made in South Africa,” he he said.

“But nothing else so we need to understand what the Chinese are thinking if we are going to craft our own strategies that will counter what they are doing because what they are doing has a huge impact on our economy,” said Marwala.

In 2019, President Cyril Ramaphosa appointed members of the Presidential Commission on the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR). The commission was meant to assist South Africa’s government in taking advantage of the opportunities presented by the digital industrial revolution. Ramaphosa chaired the commission with Marwala as the deputy Chair. The aim of the commission was to identify relevant policies, strategies and action plans that will position South Africa as a competitive global player. It included 30 members of eminent persons from different sectors of society and reflects a balance in gender, youth, labour and business, including digital start-ups as well as digital entrepreneurships.

We finished the work and made recommendations, said Marwala. Adding that one of the core recommendations included investing in human capacity development in areas of the 4IR.

He said these are areas of artificial intelligence, blockchain, engineering, computer science, finance, social science and medicine.

“As a result of this, here at UJ, we offer everybody – across different fields of study – an introductory course in artificial intelligence,” said Marwala

“And in the next few weeks we will be announcing that UJ will offer the course,  Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, for free to anybody who wants to study AI,” said Marwala.

Marwala was born in 1971 at Duthuni Village in the Tshivhase region of the Limpopo. He matriculated from the Mbilwi Secondary School, a school known for producing 100% pass rates for its matric students since 1994 and over 90% of matric exemptions since 1997. The secondary school is known for its excellent results in mathematics and science. Marwala was awarded a scholarship to study mechanical engineering at the University of Cape Town and would be transferred to study in the United States after six months.

“In the US, while studying mechanical engineering, I was expected to take 12 semesters of human and social sciences. So, I took acting classes, psychology classes, the history of South Africa and economics classes.

“And that is quite important, because many of the concepts now in artificial intelligence, such as the reinforcement learning algorithm, I learned in one of my psychology modules. So, this speaks to the importance of multidisciplinary learning,” said Marwala.

He said the importance of multidisciplinary learning is why UJ has made Artificial Intelligence and the Africa Insights Module – where students learn about African Politics, African economy and African languages – critical coursework study for all students.

Adding that it is very important for students to understand the African continent and its problems so that they can think start to think about the solutions while at universities. He added: “If we do not prepare ourselves through multidisciplinary learning, these new jobs are just going to be out of reach for many of our people and we are going to have a problem,” he said.

Marwala said the Africa by Bus project is one of the many ways students have seen and experienced the challenges facing the continent while using their new acquired knowledge to start and formulate new solutions.

“These buses have been to Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Namibia. This is because Africa’s problems are on the roads, not in the air”, said Marwala. He added that before the coronavirus pandemic hit and lockdowns were enforced across African countries, they had hoped to go to Ghana by bus.

“For me, decolonization just means we have to claim our identity,” said Marwala.

Being number one and the education precinct

Prof Marwala was inaugurated as UJ vice-chancellor in 2018. At the time Marwala said he was going to take UJ into the fourth industrial revolution.

In his interview, Marwala said his priority now is to make UJ number one in university rankings in South Africa and in Africa.

He said South African universities must be at the forefront of driving the implementation of 4IR.

When I came to this job, the University of Johannesburg was number six in terms of research output. Today we are number two, number two, I almost said number one, I am in a hurry,” said Marwala.

He quipped about how, when the results came out, a prominent Vice Chancellor, “even wrote an opinion piece saying, ‘it is not about quantity, it is about quality’. I was disturbed,” he said with slight laughter in his voice. “We think we are doing high quality work. The VC said, ‘Yes, you are number two, but I think you guys are concentrating on quantity not quality’. A week later, they research impact rankings By the Times Higher Education came out and said we were ranked number one, not only in South Africa, but in Africa,” said Marwala.

Marwala was speaking specifically to the World University Rankings created by Times Higher Education. These take into account the reputation of research done by universities and include into consideration how often papers produced by universities were quoted around the world.

“Here we are absolutely leading,” said Marwala.

The vice-chancellor also spoke of some big ideas. Marwala told Inside Education that UJ has bought the Media24 building in Auckland Park. He said his university, together with the University of Witwatersrand (Wits) are working in collaboration to turn Auckland Park into an education precinct.

He said the two institutions would speak to the City of Johannesburg and request an increase of police visibility and also request a special dispensation so that UJ and Wits security can be on the road so that our students can be able to walk from their residencies whether on campus or off campus. They should be able to walk to the local shops and to 44 A Stanley. We might even have a nightclub – a controlled nightclub because, this is part of education, said Marwala.

“I mean, when I was a student, you know, I went to nightclubs. In those nightclubs, it was all students, and it was also very educational. Strange, we used to go to night clubs and discuss fuel mechanics, he said.

Marwala said, even though the Covid-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on the economy and subsequently the National Budget, UJ has done well.

Research shows that universities have been experiencing declines in government subsidy on a per capita basis over the last few years. This, together with government’s proposal for the regulation of tuition fee increases, the cuts in funding for research and innovation and the challenges related to student funding have driven growing concerns over the sustainability of the institutions and the sector.

Earlier this year, Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande announced that because of Covid-related challenges, the National Student Financial Aid Scheme  had a shortfall of R5.7 billion. Nzimande said the NSFAS shortage will be paid by R3.09 billion in voted funds previously allocated towards university subsidies and the infrastructure money.

But UJ managed to weather the storm.

“I must confess we have thrived even before Covid (sic). Our pass rates have improved. Our finances are very, very good. When I came here, the council-controlled endowment was R1.1 billion. Now it is close to R2 billion.

At the same time, we have bought the Media24 building [in Auckland Park] and we have built two residences in Soweto. We are now on the third and these. This is this is like R200 million type of residency,” said Marwala.

Marwala said the endowment fund is money stored for rainy days, in case government say, ‘hey, we do not have money,’ he said.

“But at the same time we are investing in  solar infrastructure. These are actually classic examples of what leadership in the 21st century should look like,” said Marwala.

“This is how we become number one,” he said.

Infrastructure and Solar

The South African Energy Crisis is an ongoing period when South Africa experiences widespread rolling blackouts as supply falls behind demand, threatening to destabilize the national grid. The rolling blackouts, referred to as load shedding, began in the later months of 2007 and continues to this day.  Eskom has attributed these rolling-blackouts to insufficient generation capacity.

Marwala said people do not realize the very close link between 4IR infrastructure and energy.

He said South Africa needs to invest in 4IR infrastructure. Adding that UJ needs a 5g virtual network there so that the institution can have fast connectivity.

“I think universities must have their own spectrum. I think health organizations must have their own spectrum.

“The University of Johannesburg generates 13% of its electricity from solar. This is going to be 21% at the end year. This will allow us to introduce a very, very interesting project – the electric bus,” said Marwala.

Marwala, the grandson of a scientist

Marwala starts his day at 06:00am with a 14-kilometre walk at UJ’s Bunting Road campus in Johannesburg. He said sometimes, his students join him on these walks. After his one-hour walk he drives his son to school

“He reads for me a book on the way because I believe that reading is very, very important,” said Marwala who himself has authored 23 books, two of which, he says, he wrote while in South Africa.

“I am proud of my books, they are fantastic books. Leading in the 21st Century and Closing the Gap are absolutely good books.

“In Closing the Gap – my very beautiful book, I talk about how I learned engineering from my grandmother who could not read and write. She was a scientist. My grandmother was a scientist. The saying, ‘You cannot gather water that has spilled and put it back into a container,’. This is what they tell us in Science. This is the second law of thermodynamics,” said Marwala.

Adding that this is a powerful concept that also speaks to decolonising our education system and decolonising the mind.

Marwala has also written another book due to come out this year July.

“The book is called Leadership Lessons from the 50 Books I read. Former President Thabo Mbeki  wrote the foreword of the book. I believe decolonization means you have to get people more informed. That is what decolonization also means. That is one aspect of it,” said the UJ vice chancellor.

50-year-old teacher from Mbilwi Secondary School accused of rape

NYAKALLO TEFU| 

Mbilwi Secondary School in Thohoyandou, Limpopo has again made it in the news. This time a 50-year-old teacher appeared in court for the alleged rape of at 17-year old pupil. 

 The man appeared in the Thohoyandou magistrates court on Monday facing three counts of rape. 

Mbilwi Secondary School has been in the press for bad news. In previous years, the school was known for its stellar academic performance. Mbilwi maintained a 100% Matric pass rate since 1994 and a 90% university bachelor degree pass since 1997.

However, last month, the school made headlined after a learner, Lufuno Mavhunga was bullied by another learner. Lufuno overdosed committed suicide and the other learner appeared in court for assault. The learner is now in the care of her parents after she was given bail following the events.

And now, 20-year-old former student at the school opened a case against the 50-year-old man for raping her multiple times when she was 17 in 2018. 

Limpopo Community Safety MEC Mavhungu Lerule-Ramakhanya said she welcomed the arrest of the teacher accused of raping a pupil at Mbilwi Secondary School.

“Lerule-Ramakhanya is lobbying for the perpetrator to remain locked up until the end of the trial,” said the MEC’s spokesperson Mike Maringa. 

“Harsh penalties must be imposed on perpetrators of gender-based violence and femicide, the MEC has condemned the sexual abuse of a learner by someone who was supposed to guide and protect her,” said Maringa. 

The Department of Education in Limpopo said they are aware of the arrest of the 50-year-old male educator. 

“We are aware of the arrest of a male educator in the Vhembe East District on allegations of rape on Friday 14 May. These are serious and very disturbing allegations and cannot be taken lightly,” said MEC Polly Boshielo. 

Boshielo said they will give comment on the matter in due course. 

Police spokesperson, Brigadier Motlafela Mojapelo said the case against the 50-year-old teacher has been postponed to 24 May 2021. 

“The case was postponed to 24 May for the man to get legal representation and file a formal bail application,” said Mojapelo.  

Nzimande visits UCT after April fires

NYAKALLO TEFU|  

Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande said the fire that broke out at the University of Cape Town (UCT) has exposed the vulnerabilities of the humanities and social sciences. 

Nzimande visited UCT last week to assess the damages on some of the buildings, caused by a fire that broke out on 18 April. 

During his visit, University Council Chairperson Dr Precious Moloi-Motsepe and the Vice Chancellor Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng briefed the minister on how the institution is recovering. 

“The rescue process began on 19 April 2021, the day after the fire, when UCT Libraries Executive Director Ujala Satgoor appointed team leaders for the salvage and recovery project, said Phakeng. 

Students at the institution’s residences were evacuated after the fire broke as fears of their safety arose, however, great damage was caused to historical parts and belongings of the university. 

Students have since returned to their residences and learning is in full swing. 

Nzimande said there have been brave efforts to salvage precious records and archives, especially from among the ruins of the Jagger Library’s African Studies collection.

“The include maps, rare antiquarian books, film, video collections, newspapers, journals, magazines, pamphlets, manuscripts, government records, photographs and paintings,” said Nzimande. 

Phakeng said salvaging the archive material is only the first phase of the recovery plan. 

“The second phase is the conservation process. This delicate work is being assisted by a team of capable conservationists who are working in the triage tent that was set up outside the library on 21 April 2021,” said Phakeng.

The department of higher education has committed to supporting the rebuilding of the library by the National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences, and the National Research Foundation. 

“This will include supporting UCT’s Archive and Public Culture Research Initiative in their ongoing efforts and encourage people to volunteer their support to the Jagger Salvage Operation, which began on 13 May,” said Nzimande. 

Nzimande said rebuilding the library to go beyond digitising archives so that while these physical archives are preserved and protected against all future vulnerabilities, the library provides space to view such archives electronically, globally and within the library too. 

People across the country have been hands on with assisting the university to make sure that students and staff are safe and fed. 

Nzimande thanked all the emergency services and the South African National Parks who assisted in containing the fire. 

“I commend the leadership demonstrated by the University Council and Management in managing this unfortunate incident,” added Nzimande. 

Senior Eastern Cape Department of Education officials in court for R59 million IT fraud

NYAKALLO TEFU| 

Five officials of the Eastern Cape Department of Education have been granted R5000 bail each after they appeared in court for allegedly committing IT fraud.

The five suspects are: former chief education specialist Noxolo Gwarube, former superintendent general Mthunywa Ngonzo, former education deputy director-general Monwabisi Tywakadi, deputy director for IT Tyrone Fourie, and Hermanus Smith, 47, who is the director of Siegesmund Trust appeared in the East London Magistrates court in connection with IT fraud amounting to R59 million.

They were arrested on Monday by members of the Hawks East London Serious Corruption Investigation Team. The complete list of charges include corruption, fraud, attempted fraud, theft and contravention of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA). 

The charges against them came after the department centralised the supply of supplementary resource material.

The centralisation of the supplementary resource material meant that schools no longer procured these services themselves, but through the Department.  

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) said Gwarube, Ngonzo and Fourie decided that the unit at the Eastern Cape education department would procure these services during the 2014-2015 financial year despite the fact that the specific unit within the department had not budgeted for such procurement. 

“Any shift of funds within the budget of the Eastern Cape education department would have required a report to seek approval from National Treasury,” said NPA spokesperson, Sipho Ngwema. 

Ngwema said the accused, in truth and in fact, never intended to formalise the shift of funds in terms of the National Treasury process.

The state contents that the five suspect’s intention was from the outset to ignore the legislated imperative that such goods had to be procured through SITA and/or relevant specified contracts. 

The state also states that the five suspects disregarded their duty to comply with the provisions of the PFMA and to ensure that the procurement of said goods had to be fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost effective, and Gwarube was in charge of the Learning and Teaching Support materials (LTSM) project.  

The state said Gwarube never applied for the budget to be shifted and that Ngonzo, the superintendent general at the time was aware of the budget split but failed to ratify the intended budget split and nothing was reported to Treasury.

“Siegesmund supplied R59 million worth of IT equipment and Fourie signed off the request as if it was for books in order to access the books budget. None of the procurement protocols were followed to appoint Siegesmund as a supplier.

It is alleged a generally corrupt relationship came into existence resulting in Gwarube accepted “gifts” like 26 laptop computers of which two were for personal benefit; a cell phone, Samsung Galaxy mini S4, for the personal benefit; an agreement to accept payment of the amount of R 120 486 from Border Conference Centre into an account under the control of Spectra, an account owned by Siegesmund. 

The case against the five was postponed to 8 July 2021 as one of the accused is set to hand over dockets to the court. 

Unisa NSFAS students go hungry – allowances not paid

Students from the University of South Africa (Unisa) took to twitter this weekend stating that they have not received their National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) allowances.

One student said he has been surviving just on water alone. Another said they cannot afford to pay for transport and are forced to walk about 30 minutes to an hour to reach university campus ground. Another said they do not have money to buy data to access coursework material placed online.

In an interview, Unisa Vice-Chancellor Puleng LenkaBula said I truly regretted the situation currently faced by her students.

“I want to state that Unisa is the largest university with the largest number of students who live below the poverty line. We have about 160 000 students who are supported by NSFAS.

“These students either come from families where the combined income is less than R325 000 per annum,” said LenkaBula.

Adding that her students have blamed her and the institution for the late allowance payments but this was a structural issue out of the university’s hands.

“Some of the complaints came against me and against the university. Regrettably, our challenges and complexities derive from the centralisation of NSFAS.

“We depend on NSFAS sending information and also transferring funding  to students that are registered with Unisa.  So even to confirm whether a student is registered or not, we have to engage with NSFAS. And our CFO has been engaging NSFAS so that we accelerate student access,” she said.

Adding that often when students complain, they do not make this important point.

LenkaBula said even though the institution does not have the means to control this situation, Unisa has taken the decision to make course material available online for all students.

She said the university has “extended access”.

“There is an understanding that some students do not have money yet to register or to finalise their payment for registration but we recognise that the academic programme is in progress.

“And in order that we do not disadvantage the already disadvantaged, we have made the decision that is nor made in many institutions, and that students have access to material despite not paying for the registration because we recognise the complexity that most students come from,” she said.

We do not just sit, fold our arms and do nothing, she said.

On Saturday Unisa’s Student Funding Division said it was attending to enquiries as quickly as possible, “but there are some activities that are being affected by the lockdown, such as the processing of allowances, refunds, stipends and allocations”.

“This will affect both NSFAS and other bursary students, including postgraduate students. Allowances will be paid out as soon as the process is finalised by NSFAS,” said Unisa’s Student Funding Division.

The funding division added that NSFAS returning students will started receiving their allowances on 12 May and that subsequent allowances will be disbursed in batches of 15 000 per day) until Wednesday, 19 May.

The university said NSFAS returning students who have not received their allowances by Thursday 20 May 2021 should contact the university’s funding division.

Unisa students signed a petition that reads, “Unisa is not dispersing students allowances to their accounts of INTELIMALI in time.

“This has resulted in students failing to complete assignments in time and failing final exams because of not having text books. The university should adopt new system of paying allowances directly to students account and remove the INTELIMALI company because it has caused delays.

LenkaBula said the issue of late allowances was not just a Unisa problem.

She said students at other higher education institutions face the same problem.

“This is a structural issue that needs to be solved by society,” she said.

Lefusi condemns violent behavior of parents at Laerskool Theresapark

Gauteng Department of Education (GDE) and the South African Democratic Teachers Union (SADTU) have condemned the behaviour of parents at Laerskool Theresapark for throwing out school principal Dorothy Mabaso out of her office on Thursday.

A video taken by one of the parents shows angry parents carrying the school principal with her office chair out of the administration office before she falls off the chair.

Gauteng SADTU said it is outraged by the violent criminal behaviour meted out against the principal of the Laerskool Theresapark school.

“This barbaric action has been widely shared through a video clip circulating on social media platforms.

“She sustained injuries during this unacceptable incident,” said Provincial Secretary of SADTU Tseliso Ledimo.

Ledimo said parents have made claims that the principal is running the school into financial ruin and has allegedly abused teachers who have resorted to leaving the school.

GDE MEC Panyaza Lesufi said the provincial department has launched an investigation into these allegations made by parents.

“The violent and disruptive behaviour of some parents is unacceptable, parents have a right to be aggrieved and raise concerns, however not in this manner,” said Lesufi.

Lesufi said some of the parents are part of the School Governing Body (SGB) and the behaviour is worrying.

“This is a new SGB and if this is how they deal with issues, then it is very worrisome,” added Lesufi.

The MEC said he will visit the principal who is at home after she was booked off for seven days by her doctor.

Lesufi will also meet with school management on Friday afternoon.

“Parents said they have been sending communication regarding issues at the school which I have not received because if I did, I would have attended the issue,” said Lesufi. 

Ledimo said whatever differences the parents have with the principal these do not justify violence to resolve them.

“Everyone has a fundamental right to dignity as enshrined in our Constitution, not such humiliation. All our schools must be safe havens protected against these criminal elements,” said Ledimo.

Ledimo called on the Gauteng department of education to provide the necessary support to the school principal and those who have been traumatized by this unfortunate situation.

The GDE must also investigate the matter and take appropriate action. Furthermore, we call on the law enforcement agencies to investigate the matter and subject those who are found to be responsible to the might of the law.

DBE to discuss continuing contact sport amid rising Covid-19 infection rates at schools

Two special meetings are scheduled for next week by the department of basic education (DBE) to discuss the impact of allowing contact activities to continue at schools.

This is in the wake of an increase in Covid-19 cases among pupils taking part in sporting activities across the country.

Inside Education reported that at least two schools in Gauteng have been closed after several Covid-19 cases were detected.

DBE spokesperson Elijah Mhlanga confirmed that high-level meetings are set to discuss how the department, together with its provincial departments, should handle Covid-19 protocols, particularly around contact sport, going forward.

Inside Education reported this week that executive at Aspen Pharmacare Stavros Nicolaou said a third wave of Covid-19 infections is inevitable.

“Every year in South Africa about 11 000 people die of flu,” he said.

Studies by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases show that Gauteng will have the worst third wave across all scenarios. This is due to the higher concentration of working-age adults and people with co-morbidities, and the lower estimates of previous infections in the province, said the study.

The report also states that there has been an increase of infections in the Free State and the North West.

On Monday, Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize said Covid-19 test positivity ratios have increased to 29% in the Northern Cape at the end of last week, 16.9% in the Free State and 12.3% in the North West.

This is the context against which the education department has decided to assess the impact of having allowed sport to happen at schools, and contact sport in particular.

Mhlanga said DBE will continue to monitor schools and the application of the health and safety protocols.

Union says rotten food was given to school children in KZN

The Educators Union of South Africa (EUSA) President Scelo Bhengu said maggots were found in learners’ food at Ziphembeleni Secondary School in Inanda, KwaZulu-Natal.

Bhengu shared a video on social media with a half-eaten plate of phutu and amasi showing maggots moving on the plate.

The rotten food served at the school is as part of the National Schools’ Nutrition Programme (NSNP).

In response to the incident, KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Education MEC Kwazi Mshengu said a full probe is to be conducted following ongoing reports of maggot-infested food being distributed to learners at Inanda-based Eziphembeleni Secondary School, north of Durban.

DA KZN Spokesperson on Education Imran Keeka said while the problems that exist within the NSNP in KZN are well documented, the serving of rotten food has taken matters to a whole new level.

“It is now clear that investigations conducted by department of education officials following earlier incidents has not changed anything and we urge Mshengu to get to the bottom of what is happening at this school,” Keeka said.

Mshengu said his department sent out a team to investigate allegations made by EUSA president of school children being fed rotten food.

But EUSA president said he was not convinced.

“The KZN department of education officials will once again conduct their lacking dexterity investigation and issue a cooked report to protect their cdes (sic) at the expense of our kids,” said Bhengu.

The incident of rotten food served to children from poor backgrounds at government public schools is the fourth incident to take place this year at the same school.

Bhengu said Ziphembeleni Secondary School has had issues with spoiled food since the beginning of the year.  

“It happened on the last week of March, I took a video again of a bag of samp that had insects on it,” said Bhengu.

Spokesperson for the KZN Department of Education Kwazi Mthethwa said the department is committed to providing healthy meals to all learners across the province. 

“If the food was off or was not in a good state, we have to investigate and check with our officials and confirm those details,” he said.

According to the KZN education department website, the NSNP aims to enhance the learning capacity of learners through the provision of a healthy meal a day at schools.

“Where it is implemented, the programme has shown to improve punctuality, regular school attendance, concentration and the general wellbeing of participating learners,” said Mthethwa.

AfriForum says DBE must explain the vaccine programme registration at school

Lobby group AfriForum has called for the Department of Basic Education (DBE) to clarify its statement on parents and guardians of learners being required to register for a vaccine programme. 

The DBE released a statement before learners returned to school for the second term in May, saying it is in the process of preparing for a vaccination programme as part of the Department of Health’s planned vaccine programme.

DBE Minister Angie Motshekga said according to the department of health, the first phase of the vaccination programme will target citizens that are over the age of 60-years and employees at risk who have been identified as social workers.

Spokesperson for DBE, Elijah Mhlanga, said parents and guardians of learners will be required to register as part of the preparation for the vaccine programme to be rolled out in a date to be announced by the health department.

Stavros Nicolaou, executive at Aspen Pharmacare said a third wave of Covid infections is inevitable. Every year in South Africa about 11 000 people die of flu.

Studies by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases show that Gauteng will have the worst third wave across all scenarios. This is due to the higher concentration of working-age adults and people with co-morbidities, and the lower estimates of previous infections in the province, said the study.

The report also states that there has been an increase of infections in the Free State and the North West.

Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize said Covid-19 test positivity ratios have increased to 29% in the Northern Cape at the end of last week, 16.9% in the Free State and 12.3% in the North West.

On Monday Inside Education reported that a school 230 people had to self isolate after a school rugby game

At the time Mkhize said initially there were four people that tested positive.

“Then a whole crowd of over 200 people had to quarantined. And then in the process, the following day the number went up to 11 positive cases. Right now, there are about 32 people that tested positive for the coronavirus,” said Mkhize.

Mkhize added that the fact that this happened during a rugby game shows that schools, similarly, have loosened up conduct.

On Wednesday, two Gauteng schools were shut down after Covid-19 cases were detected.

Gauteng education spokesperson Steve Mabona said the department can confirm that a decision has been made, in consultation with thedepartment oh health, district directors and Gauteng department of education management, to suspend academic activities at Krugersdorp High School and St John’s College as a means of managing the discovery of several Covid-19 cases in each school.

AfriForum’s Education Rights Manager Natasha Venter said as much as they understand the importance of vaccination, pupils, teachers and guardians cannot be forced in to programme.

“It should however be every person’s choice whether they, as well as their children, want to be vaccinated,” said Venter.

Venter added that President Cyril Ramaphosa repeatedly assured the country that no-one will be forced to receive the vaccine, something the statement released by DBE  Minister Angie Motshekga’s statement go against.

“DBE must clarify the statement about the required registration for the vaccine programme. We want to know the purpose of the registration and whether parents and guardians would be forced to register,” said Venter.

Adding that clarity is also required on who should register. “Is it the guardians and parents or is it the children.

“Also, should the government intend to make the vaccination of learners at public schools and the registration thereof compulsory, AfriForum will oppose it,” said Venter.

Habib not racist, says UK university board

Professor Adam Habib resumed his duties as Director at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) University of London this week.

Marie Staunton, Chair of Board of Trustees at SOAS, said the SOAS Board of Trustees met on Tuesday last week and have accepted in full the recommendations of the independent external investigation into the meeting of 11 March and events arising from that. 

The recommendations state that once required actions are put in place, Habib can be reinstated as director at the school.

Habib was suspended for the use of the “n-word” during a Zoom meeting with students.

At the time SOAS Black Student Body said Habib is not fit to hold his position. They said SOAS must still deal with issues of black students’ wellbeing, university fees, student debt, surveillance as well as bordering and policing.

The student body added that Habib’s “history of reaction” in relation to questions of economic justice, including calling the militarised police on #FeesMustFall student protesters at Wits University when he was Vice Chancellor, shows he is not fit to be the university’s director.

On 23 March SOAS staff overwhelmingly backed a vote of no confidence against Habib with 98% of members present voting in favour of the motion, 0% against, and 2% abstaining.

South Africa’s political party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) also called on SOAS to fire Habib following the incident.

“We call for the immediate removal of Habib from his position as director of SOAS University as he has exhibited extreme bigoty and is unfit to lead a department that ought to intellectually lead social change,” said the EFF in a statement issues by its national spokesperson, Vuyani Pambo.

Staunton said the board acknowledged the pain and distress caused to many in their community. She said the board is taking this opportunity to apologise again to all those who have been so affected and distressed by these events.

She said the board has accepted all the recommendations from the investigation and that they are taking specific action on all of them.

“The actions being taken include putting in place a restorative justice approach for the meeting of 11 March and events arising, developing a clear policy for the SOAS community on the use of the n-word and continuing to take forward the process of dialogue between the SOAS community of staff & students and SOAS leadership,” said Staunton.

She added: “I want to be clear especially on the use of the n-word: the report notes that the director [Habib] spoke the word in full while trying to say that it should not be used within the SOAS community.

“Habib has since acknowledged that speaking the word in full was a mistake, for which he has apologised,” she said.

Adding that the report was nonetheless critical of his response to students at the meeting and in his subsequent tweets.

She said the report found that Habib’s mistake was of vocalising the n-word in full, while trying to say that using the word offensively is unacceptable, “did not in itself make him a racist,” said Staunton.