IFP slams Gauteng education MEC over 54,000 pupils not placed
'The education department has dealt with this matter with a clear lack of seriousness and urgency,' the party in Gauteng said.
Pupils make their way to school in Alexandra, 11 January 2017, as schools re-open today for the new school year. Picture: Michel Bega
The Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in Gauteng has lambasted the province’s member of the executive committee in charge of education, Panyaza Lesufi, for the fact that 54 000 pupils have not yet received placements in schools ahead of the deadline on October 31, saying he has handled the issue with “a lack of seriousness and urgency”.
This comes after the department of education released a statement on Monday revealing that 19.37% of the pupils who applied for placements into Grade 1 and Grade 8 were still on the waiting list.
Department spokesperson Steve Mabona urged parents whose children were not placed yet to submit any relevant documents which might be holding back the applications and placements of their children.
He wrote: “The department is working tirelessly to ensure all unplaced pupils who applied during the application period are placed… We appeal to parents not to despair as we are working around the clock to ensure that all pupils are placed.”
However, Gauteng IFP spokesperson Musa Ngobeni expressed concern that the department “took this long to realise the gravity of the situation and finally begin to communicate with parents … even though fully aware of this backlog at an earlier time”.
While the party acknowledged the part the parents had to play in ensuring their children got placed, the department was equally responsible for not ensuring parents were actively engaged and registering the pupils on time, said Ngobeni.
“The education department has dealt with this matter with a clear lack of seriousness and urgency … if the department was serious it would not have left this matter until the 11th hour.
“MEC Lesufi would do well to table a plan on how the department plans to place all these pupils by the end of the month when it could not do so in over six months as applications were open as early as April.
“It shouldn’t take more than three months for pupils to know their fate and start preparing accordingly.
“The Gauteng department of education must review its online application system and identify challenges to correct these before it becomes a crisis in January.”
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