‘Scared for our kids’: Pit toilets endanger South African pupils | Education News

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Nwafo

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Schools across rural South Africa have perilous and degrading pit latrines – a heritage of the apartheid era that campaigners say symbolises inequality and government ineptitude.

More than 3,300 of South Africa’s 23,000 public schools still use pit latrines, according to government figures released in March. The rudimentary toilets typically consist of a concrete slab on the ground with a drop of at least 3 metres (10 feet) deep.

Successive governments have promised to eradicate the scourge, with the Cyril Ramaphosa administration promising at least twice to replace open latrines in schools. But deadlines for replacing them have come and gone, leaving young children at risk of falling in and drowning.

The unhygienic open toilets are “a legacy of apartheid”, said Amnesty International’s Sibusiso Khasa, who is campaigning for political action to address the problem.

Although there is no reliable data on child drownings in pit latrines, there have been multiple reports in the local media for years.

In March, a four-year-old girl was found dead in a school pit toilet in the Eastern Cape province. One month later, a 20-month-old girl died in a pit toilet in a relative’s back yard in the central Free State province.

Refilwe Diloane told the AFP news agency of the day her son, Oratile, once fell into a pit latrine in his school. The then five-year-old slipped into a hole full of human waste and was rescued by a gardener using a rope.

He had “bruises and the head was swollen … and smelling faeces [were] coming from his mouth,” Diloane said, remembering the day the incident took place in May 2016.

“He was perfectly healthy and was a very smart child. I thought he would become the next president [of the country],” the 46-year-old said, tears rolling down her cheeks.

The boy suffered injuries that left him severely brain-damaged, according to his mother. He was no longer able to perform mundane tasks and struggles to string full sentences together.

Following the accident, Oratile was diagnosed with hydrocephalus, epilepsy and autism, said Diloane at their home in Kanana village, about 180 kilometres (112 miles) northwest of Johannesburg.

Taking off his beanie hat, the 12-year-old reveals a scar on his head.

He suffers from memory loss but tells his mother every day that he remembers the fall.

“I fell into the toilet,” he says, looking at his mother. He also asks why he has no friends or he cannot go to school, she said.

No Title

Toilets in some public schools in South Africa are dirty, disgusting and dangerous, especially for children. Government leaders are promising improvements following the death of two students. However, that is unlikely for another 12 years. Campaigners for better education say it is a national disgrace. Al Jazeera’s Fahmida Miller reports from the Eastern Cape province.

‘Lack of political will’

The pit toilets at his primary school where the accident happened have since been replaced. But the wider picture of introducing flushing toilets where they are still sorely needed remains bleak.

South Africa is the world’s most unequal country, according to the World Bank, despite the end of apartheid in 1994. The use of pit toilets in Africa’s most industrialised economy is a stark reminder of the problem.

Privately run schools offer world-class facilities, score high pass rates and cost three times more than state-run schools. But in most rural areas, pit latrines remain common, campaigners say.

In 1996, the country had 9,000 schools that “had no appropriate toilets and were dependent on basic pit toilets”, according to the education ministry.

However, pointing to progress since the end of apartheid, Amnesty campaigner Khasa blasted the government for failing in its “obligations to protect human rights”.

The education ministry did not respond to AFP’s request for comment.

In 2018, when he came to power, Ramaphosa’s government said $500,000 would be needed to eradicate open latrines from schools. Education Minister Angie Motshekga then set another deadline for March this year, which has been pushed to 2025.

The government has faced court action from affected families as well as rights and opposition groups to force it to act.

In 2019, a court ordered the government to pay 1.4 million rand ($75,000) in damages to the family of Michael Komape, a five-year-old who drowned in a toilet in 2014.

“The fact that they’ve been missing their own deadlines, it’s a huge indicator that there’s lack of political will,” said Amnesty’s Khasa.

Oratile’s plight traumatised other families in the neighbourhood.

Lebogang Lebethe said her pre-teen son was in the same class as Oratile at the time.

“We were scared for our kids,” the 48-year-old mother of four told AFP, tending to her sweet potato garden. When “we take our kids to school, we think … they are safe there but [when this] happens, it’s devastating”, she said.

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