Kliptown Primary School, near the famous site of the adoption of the Freedom Charter in June 1955, is one of the oldest in Gauteng, dating back to 1899.
In 2015, it was identified as one of 29 schools built with asbestos, a substance banned since 2008. Eight years later, only four of these schools have been replaced.
Kliptown Primary is in a state of disrepair, risking the health and safety of its 598 pupils and staff.
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The classrooms are full of holes and birds have nested in the roof. Old furniture is scattered between classrooms. Mobile toilets are positioned in front of sealed bathrooms, a testament to a water leak that has persisted for several months.
Asbestos dust can cause diseases of the lungs, including mesothelioma, a cancer.
Petunia Bailey, chairperson of the grassroots organisation Community Accountability Gatekeepers (CAG), said the school was not safe.
“When it rains, it pours into these classrooms, and when it’s windy, dust blows right into the classes while teaching and learning are in progress.”
She said complaints to the Department of Basic Education and the Gauteng Education Department “are falling on deaf ears.”
On 29 November 2013, the Minister of Basic Education Angie Motshekga signed regulations setting minimum norms and standards for public school infrastructure.
These regulations mandated the replacement of schools constructed with inappropriate materials such as mud, wood, metal, or asbestos by 29 November 2016.
Gauteng Education Department spokesperson Steve Mabona said that of the 29 schools identified for replacement, four had been rebuilt, and three were in the process of being rebuilt.
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The remaining 22 “are in various design stages”, he said, and would be completed before the end of March 2026.
“It is important to note that the nature of infrastructure projects is unfortunately such that unforeseen delays do sometimes occur, which would be handled on a case-by-case basis,” Mabona said.
In some cases, land had to be acquired before the construction of a new school could take place.
Mabona said the department was not only focusing on schools built entirely of asbestos but also schools with asbestos roofs.
“This is done through the appointment of asbestos specialists who identify the asbestos, mark it through signage, and put maintenance, training and asbestos abatement plans in place to manage facilities safely and compliantly with asbestos in the interim until the asbestos is fully eradicated.”
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Nancefield Primary School in Soweto, with more than 1,200 pupils and 33 teachers, is also among those identified for replacement, and construction of a new school started in 2020 on a site across the road.
Pupils were moved into prefab classrooms. But three years later, they are still in the prefab classrooms and nothing is happening on the construction site, where the only human presence is two security guards.
Published originally on GroundUp. Written by Marvin Adams
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