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BBC News, Cape Town
The fears of the famous municipalities in the exterior city of the city of Cape Town and the fears of the gangs forcing some parents to make difficult decisions to their children’s earlier schools.
“Thieves would enter the guns that threaten the teachers, in front of their students who carried his laptops,” Sibahle Mbasana reported the school in the greatest town of Cape Town town.
“Imagine your child living regularly. There is almost no security and even if there is nothing to do.”
There are more than three decades since the end of the white minority rule in South Africa, but there are still a wide difference in the Apartheid racist system.
Mrs. Mbasana feel his three children in the heir of this heritage – especially at a school of town halls in the town hall of six to 10 years in a school.
One of the main laws of the Apartheid style were 1953 Bante Education Act, children had to reach their full potential. This created schools with fewer funding and fewer resources that day, which are now overwhelmed today and often falls off the crime and great violence.
Mbasana grew up in the East Cape province and went to Khayelitsha when he was 18, he is currently 12, and his other son Anele, 11, in the town of Simon in the town of 40km.
The boy has met seven-year-old sister Buhle in school, with better facilities and smaller classes.
“Buhle (that) I didn’t go to school, because I’ve already suffered so many things with two boys when they were in that school” celurbill 34-year-old clothing designer.
He and her husband loved moving family completely from Khayelitsh.
“We don’t want to live in the municipality, but we have to live here because we can’t move,” he said.
“Talk to anyone in the municipality and say they would tell you that they would go first.”
There is no doubt that there is no doubt that village schools, visual visions and hard-teacher teachers, despite the poor infrastructure and obstacles with large classes.
However, security and safety has been insurmountable for some, for example, when the gangs require teacher protection.
The Larup News website reported that the primary school teachers of East Philippi East, near Khayelish, reported that 10% of wages worked with impunity.
“It’s not safe at all. We’re in extreme danger,” A teacher said.
“These gangs are taken to the school gun. Our lives are in danger. School teachers require transfers because they are not safe.”
According to the Department of Western Cape Education (WCED), a private security company is located in the school and the police are close.
But similar events occurred in the five schools around Nyanga, Philippi and Samora Machel.
“Sipho Sipho Simon works in town and he travels there, so I thought my kids would be safer and more comfortable to go to that school,” Mrs. Mbasana said.
But they are longer, but by bus or minibus taxi, schools are safer in their risks and stress.
“When my kids get up at 4.30 p.m. and SIFO is transported. Sifo worked somewhere else, they get out of 5.30 and Mrs. Mbasana said.
“They’re always tired and want to sleep. They are strong because they do their homework, but they sleep much before other children.”
Lifalethu did the national titles last year, from Khayelitxa to the village of Simon, and then he refused the bus while he could not find his card.
The participant driver was then interrupted against the company’s policy, which requires support to school students in uniforms who have lost their entries.
Falling with darkness, Mrs. Mbasana was The worst nightmare was when Anele said his older brother on the boat.
But the massive social frenzy on social media and several stories of Fortuna were found at a stage, boys gave the elevator at a gasoline station about 5 km from home.
From there he walked around with a guardian who lived around him, along with his armed family who led him when the police authorities struck.
Its case highlighted the permission of thousands of municipal students, and some of them return 80 km a day during the day, public transport or pre-organized travel, Minibus taxis to go to school in suburban areas.
The rich residents of the suburbs often go for private education for their children, that is, they tend to have spaces for those who come from State schools away.
Donovan Williams, Director General of the Major State in the fashion fashion of the town of Cape Towns, are about 85% of students about 830 students from villages.
“Some parents work in that area while most spend a lot of money to access schools with better infrastructure,” BBC said.
“Sometimes they fall asleep in class.”
According to Amnesty International, South Africa has one of the most unbalanced school systems in the world. The result of the child depends on the color of his hometown, wealth and color.
“The children of 200 schools achieves more mathematical distinctions in mathematics in the next 6,600 schools. The playing area must be equalized,” its 2020 reports said.
State schools are subsidized, but parents still have to pay school rates, in the western Cape between 60 (£ 45) and $ 4,350 (£ 3,350) years.
More than 100 of the provinces of almost 1,700 schools have not been fee institutions for students living in areas controlled by the government.
The provincial education department has often explained that the government must be deficient to finance the government, and more medium-class areas go to parenting to cover costs.
Recently 2,407 teaching positions were lost in the province, with 64% of the government who assigned only 64% of the cost of the Government’s coverage agreement, said what he said.
Message restrictions means that some contract teachers were not submitted when their contracts ended in December, some permanent teachers have been asked to move schools.
“We’re in the impossible position, and it’s not our doing, and the western Cape is not the only affected province,” he added.
South Africa (Naptosa) Teacher Organizations have indicated that the decision has been particularly destructive in impoverishment and criminal areas.
“This is the real impact of this is a typical school in your town. They cannot represent teachers to the government’s body appointments, which is the opportunity for parents to pay for extra fees”, Basil Manuel said by Parents’ Director BBCK.
“They feel the cut, they will have larger class sizes, they will have a teacher who emphasized.
“Children, especially those who are not academically bent, will cross cracks.”
The constant educational differences that accuse experts accuse the fault of the African National Congress (ANC) Nelson Mandela Government government took over the 1994 apartheid regime.
“Anck” was a research teacher for ASlam FATAR, Stellenbosch University University. “, said BBC.
In front of the prosecutorous Austerity “The poorer schools were never given the opportunity to teach and develop a permanent learning platform,” he said.
“Political interest in the city’s schools has been lost 20 years ago. When teaching expenses and student-teacher ratios are created, this sector can be left. The teachers of these schools continue to rumors.”
The FATAR PROP is equally about the future: “I can’t see, a bar, how we can increase the financial school finances.”
Parents like Mbasanas, stuck in the municipalities and often in the mercy of gangs, they were impatient.