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Hombre envenena con golosinas a 60 niños en colegios de Sudáfrica

África/Sudáfrica/11 Noviembre 2016/Primera Hora

Un hombre envenenó con golosinas a unos sesenta niños de tres escuelas del sur de Johannesburgo, que fueron ingresados con vómitos y dolores de estómago, informaron hoy a Efe fuentes de la Policía de Sudáfrica.

Dos de los niños fueron hospitalizados en estado crítico, pero su situación ha mejorado y ya han sido dados de alta junto al resto de los escolares, explicó a Efe el portavoz policial, Kay Makhubele.

El sospechoso, al que la Policía trata de identificar recabando información de los niños y del personal de los centros, y contra el que se han presentado cargos por intento de asesinato, repartió las chucherías a las puertas de los colegios.

El Departamento de Educación de la provincia de Gauteng confirmó que las gominolas llevaban sustancias dañinas para el organismo humano, aunque no proporcionó más detalles sobre su composición.

«Pedimos a los padres y a los maestros que insistan en que los niños no hablen ni interaccionen con personas desconocidas», declaró el jefe del departamento, Panyaza Lesufi, que dijo no poder entender las razones que llevan a alguien a envenenar a estos menores.

Varias ambulancias del servicio de emergencias se desplazaron hasta las escuelas para atender a los niños, después de que éstos se quejaran de dolores abdominales y náuseas.

Los menores fueron trasladados de inmediato a los hospitales del South Rand y Baragwanath, en Soweto, para recibir atención urgente.

Fuente: http://www.primerahora.com/noticias/mundo/nota/hombreenvenenacongolosinasa60ninosencolegiosdesudafrica-1187520/

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Michelle Nkamankeng es la escritora más joven de África.

Michelle, de siete años, escribió «Esperar las olas», una obra que le dio popularidad y la llevó a dar charlas en colegios.

África/Sudáfrica/08.11.2016/Autor y Fuente:http://www.telesurtv.net/

La plataforma estadounidense de venta por Internet Amazon puso a la venta los libros de Michelle Nkamankeng, la niña sudafricana de siete años que se convirtió en una de de las escritoras más jóvenes de inspiración para los niños.

«Mis hermanos y hermanas sabían que escribía porque siempre vienen a mi habitación. Pero les dije que guardaran el secreto porque quería darles una sorpresa a papá y a mamá», comentó Michelle.

Su madre, Lolo Nkamankeng, recordó que su primer libro lo puso en la biblioteca, en medio de las biblias, diccionarios y revistas que ocupan sus pocos estantes.

Esperar las olas tiene 50 páginas con ilustraciones de una artista sudafricana, que cuenta la historia de «Titi», que aprende a superar su miedo a las olas.

Con la experiencia de Michelle «otros niños descubren que es posible lograr cosas importantes porque tienen un ejemplo, un modelo», aseguró el director del Colegio del Sagrado Corazón en Johanesburgo Colin Northmore, donde estudia la niña.

Fuente: http://www.telesurtv.net/news/Michelle-Nkamankeng-es-la-escritora-mas-joven-de-Africa-20161104-0047.html

Imagen: http://www.telesurtv.net/__export/1478299255966/sites/telesur/img/multimedia/2016/11/04/q4vyepybntzhzmpnkikh.jpg_1718483347.jpg

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Nigeria: Dream Sports Africa Ready to Empower Youth Sports

África/Nigeria/Noviembre de 2016/Fuente: All Africa

RESUMEN: Dream Sports Africa, organización sin ánimo de lucro con sede en Estados Unidos (ONG) registrada en Nigeria, ha puesto en marcha un programa de desarrollo juvenil que ayudaría a diseñar y gestionar el empoderamiento de los jóvenes a través del deporte en Nigeria. El lanzamiento que tuvo lugar en Abuja promovería el desarrollo físico, los poderes intelectuales y morales entre los jóvenes africanos a través de la educación deportiva. La fundadora y directora ejecutiva de Dream Sports Africa, Chenfa Dombin, dijo: «Nuestra meta es crear iniciativas de desarrollo deportivo que fortalezcan las capacidades y empoderen a los jóvenes africanos para futuras profesiones y por eso tenemos operaciones en Ghana, Liberia y queremos Hacerlo en Nigeria.

In order to help grow our youth sports in the country, Dream Sports Africa, a US-based non-profit organisation (NGO) registered in Nigeria has launched a youth development programme that would help design and manage youth empowerments through sports in Nigeria. The launching which took place in Abuja would promote physical development, intellectual and moral powers among African youths through sports education.

The founder and Chief Executive Officer, Dream Sports Africa, Chenfa Dombin, said, «Our goal is to create sport development initiatives that build skills and empower African youths for future professions and that is why we have operations in Ghana, Liberia and we want to do so in Nigeria.

According to Dombin, after completing his MBA studies in the University of Michigan in 2010 he worked with a Washington DC based international non-profit organisation for 5 years where as a Director of Youth Empowerment he designed and managed three innovative programmes that raised $3 million over 3 years for youth empowerment through basketball, athletics and peer mentoring programmes in Nigeria.

Today, these programmes have benefitted 15 secondary school Nigerians and over 5,000 youths in the FCT Abuja. We have also employed about 50 Nigerians as programme staff and coaches.»

Dombin said, «Launching Dream Sports Africa is the start of something big in Nigeria that will grow across Africa. I am humbled and honoured to be able to impact young Africans through sports. I was in their shoes not too long ago and so for me this work is driven by passion, purpose and giving back to my community».

In addition, President of the Nigerian Basketball Federation, Tijjani Umar, said, «Dream Sports Africa’s model emphasises grassroots development of sports as a way to access and impact Nigerians and African youths positively. Umar further said, this will help extend the impact of sports organisations like the NBBF and we look forward to partnering with Dream Sports Africa on several innovative youth empowerment through sports programmes in Nigeria.»

At the launching also was a country representative, John Anejo, who is responsible for all local operations, business development and programming. John is an experienced sports and fitness professional with a passion for young people.

Other dignitaries at the launch were, Deputy Minority Leader of the Nigeria House of Representatives, Honorable Chukwuka Onyema; Member of the Nigeria House of Representatives,

Honorable Gaza Gbefwi; Deputy Director Co-Curricular, Secondary Education Board, Victoria George; The minister of Youth and Sports was also represented at the event.

Fuente: http://allafrica.com/stories/201611060060.html

Foto de archivo

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Students in South Africa vow to keep protesting over tuition fees

África/Sudáfrica/Noviembre de 2016/Autor: Kim Cloete/Fuente: PRI.org

RESUMEN: Las protestas han estallado en las universidades de Sudáfrica en los últimos meses, ya que los estudiantes exigen una educación universitaria gratuita para todos. Muchos sudafricanos apoyan, al menos de la idea de la educación gratuita para los pobres. Pero recientemente, las protestas han tomado un giro más militante. El mes pasado en la Universidad de Ciudad del Cabo, los estudiantes barrieron las entradas al campus, irrumpieron en los edificios, activaron alarmas de incendio e insistieron en que el personal y los estudiantes abandonaran el local. Tenían la intención de cerrar el campus.En un incidente particularmente violento, un par de manifestantes se liberaron de la multitud y se volvieron contra un guardia de seguridad, pisoteándolo y golpeándolo con una barra de metal. Recientemente, me senté con Sinawo Tambo, un estudiante de segundo año y líder de la protesta, para tratar de entender por qué las manifestaciones se han vuelto tan intensas recientemente.«La educación es un derecho básico para todos», dice. «Así que la cuestión que tenemos con los honorarios es que excluyen a la mayoría de la gente en este país, porque pone un precio en la educación».

Protests have erupted at universities across South Africa over the past few months — as students call for free university education, for all. Many South Africans are supportive, at least of the idea of free education for the poor.

But recently, protests have taken a more militant turn.

Last month at the University of Cape Town, students barricaded entrances to campus, burst into buildings, set off fire alarms and insisted that staff and students leave the premises. They intended to shut down the campus.

In one particularly violent incident, a couple of protesters broke free from the crowd and turned on a security guard, trampling him and beating him with a metal bar.

Recently, I sat down with Sinawo Tambo, a second-year student and protest leader, to try to understand why the demonstrations have recently become so intense.

«Education is a basic right for everyone,» he says. «So the issue we have with fees is that they exclude the majority of people in this country, because it puts a price tag on education.»

The #FeesMustFall protests began a year ago in response to an increase in fees at South African universities. Protests stopped, for a while, when the government announced there would be no tuition hikes for 2016.

However, more recently, South Africa’s minister of higher education announced that fees will go up next year. This reinvigorated the protests on campuses throughout the country. The government has promised to work towards free education for the poor, but it doesn’t have enough money for it yet. Protesters insist that they want free education for all.

Students are fueled in part by what they see as the slow pace of economic progress in South Africa, which has one of the highest rates of both youth unemployment and inequality worldwide.

According to Statistics South Africa, black students are five times less likely to study at a university than white students. Money is a huge problem. Students can get loans, but rack up debt. Tambo says he can’t afford to pay back loans as he is expected to financially support his extended family as soon as he gets a job.

«My entire family is dependent on me getting a degree and getting a job,» he says.

Tambo says the protests aren’t just about fees, though: They’re also about what he and fellow activists call “decolonization.”

«By free, decolonized education, we mean that the education we are being taught must speak to the lived experiences and needs of black people in the country,» he says. «We must be able to see ourselves in our curriculum, and it mustn’t be Eurocentric.»

I asked Tambo if he condones the violence that’s come with the protests.

«Students are not going all out to be violent and to fight or to burn or to destroy or anything, but it’s always a response,» he says. «On the side of students, it’s a retaliation to the day-to-day antagonisms and provoking of student protests.»

Across the country, students have accused police of brutality, for firing stun grenades and rubber bullets at them. More than 500 protestors have been arrested. Some students have been injured in clashes with police. The government has appealed for calm. But students are not giving up, vowing they’ll shut the country down if need be.

A few days after that campus protest turned violent, students from the four universities in and around Cape Town converged on the parliament building downtown. They handed a «memorandum of demands» to the minister of finance.

The protest started peacefully but then unraveled when one or two students flung bottles at police.

Police retaliated by firing stun grenades. Then bricks started flying. At least one student was badly injured. It’s hard to know where things will go from here.

With violence escalating, the University of Cape Town canceled all lectures for a few weeks. University officials hope to reopen campus on Monday to start the end-of-year exams. But with protesters vowing to continue, many students fear they won’t be able to complete the year.

I ask Tambo about criticism that the protests are holding 26,000 students ransom.

«We are holding ourselves at ransom,» he replies. «We are not people who are against universities functioning, but we want them to change, and this is the moment they have to change, because we are not going to protest annually for the same thing and not get results.»

For Tambo and his fellow protestors, the promises of 1994 ring hollow. That’s when apartheid ended and South Africa became a democracy.

«There was no real reconciliation,» he says. «It was as if there was no one who supported apartheid. Everyone who supported apartheid prior to 1994 just magically disappeared, and we were all supposed to work together. We were all supposed to be one big happy family while the tangible issues that face black people at an economic level, at an institutional level, were never resolved. There has been no tangible change for black people in South Africa.»

Fuente: http://www.pri.org/stories/2016-11-04/students-south-africa-vow-keep-protesting-over-tuition-fees

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Sudáfrica: The fight for free education and the lessons of the student movement

África/Sudáfrica/Noviembre de 2016/Autor: Ben Morken/Fuente: Marxist

RESUMEN: Esencialmente, la lucha de los jóvenes de hoy refleja la crisis del sistema capitalista que no puede ofrecer ningún camino para las masas. La lucha amarga es un punto de inflexión para la sociedad sudafricana, que ha visto surgir durante la última década las contradicciones de clase. Los estudiantes y la intelligentsia son un barómetro sensible del estado de ánimo en la sociedad y sus luchas hoy son una anticipación de lo que está por venir. Demuestran que hay una cólera y una frustración profundas en la situación actual.

Essentially, the struggle of the youth today reflects the crisis of the capitalist system which cannot offer any way forward for the masses. The bitter struggle is a turning point for South African society which has seen class contradictions rising over the past decade. The students and intelligentsia are a sensitive barometer of the mood in society and their struggles today are an anticipation of what is to come. They show that there is deep anger and frustration at the current state of affairs.

A crisis of the regime

Starting off as a movement against tuition fees and for free education, the movement has gone way beyond these immediate issues. The violent crackdown and the arrogance of the government has politicised and radicalised the movement. The intensity and sweep of the protests, in turn, have captured the attention of all classes. As the situation unfolds on a daily basis, the government seems increasingly paralysed and does not know how to proceed. The ground is shifting beneath its feet and it wields no authority over the movement.

This inability to rule in the old way is a signal of an approaching revolutionary crisis. The traditional support base has grown disillusioned with the ANC which has been presiding over all the cuts and attacks against the workers and the youth since taking power in 1994. This is reflected in the violent crackdown of the government against the movement. It shows the increasing inability of the ANC to exercise its traditional function for the ruling class of holding back the mass movement. The bourgeoisie on the other hand, does not have an alternative to the ANC. This has plunged it into a profound crisis.

Consumed by infighting, the government is completely out of touch with the situation. This is evident in its latest attempt to “resolve” the crisis. President Zuma created a task team which initially consisted of ministers of the Security Cluster – Defense, Justice, Police, Correctional Services and State Security. This speaks volumes of the government’s approach to the protests. Zuma has belatedly included the ministers of Finance, Communication, Housing and Social Development after a call by the ANC. But this only adds to the inept and clumsy manner in which the government is handling the issue.

The militarisation of the campuses is actually having the opposite effect of its intended purpose, because it only pours fuel on the fire. The ruling class is split and lacks the necessary internal cohesion to respond effectively. The regime is in a deep crisis, which has been caused by the rising tide of the class struggle. The student movement is exacerbating this crisis.

Social origins

The student protests themselves have their roots in the upsurge of the class struggle of the recent period. It is part of a broader process, which has taken place over the last few years, in which the masses have again and again taken to the road of mass struggle in search of solutions to the social and economic crisis they face. Over the last decade there have been waves of mass struggle which have taken various shapes and forms. These struggles, especially in the period between 2009-2012, saw an explosion of strikes which battered the political landscape and ushered in a period of political realignment.

The capitalist policies carried out by the African National Congress and the militant response by the workers resulted in the former mass liberation movement beginning to fracture along class lines. The turning point was the Marikana massacre which saw the ANC responsible for apartheid era atrocities against striking poor black workers. Huge class contradictions have since emerged between the ANC leadership which has the joined the ranks of the ruling class, and the working class masses that supported it for decades. The crisis in the Tripartite Alliance, the splits in the trade union movement, the emergence of forces to the left to the ANC, as well as a number of community based organisations, are products of this process.The student protests are the latest phase in this line of development.

On the one hand we the leadership of the ANC and its allies, which have joined the capitalist club, mostly backed by the older generation of the former liberation movement. On the other hand, we have the new generation of youth that is bearing the brunt of the capitalist crisis and the consequences of  the 1994 “transition”. The outcome of those negotiations between the leaders of the black elite and the traditional white capitalist class resulted in a deal in which the ANC leaders were allowed to form the government while the economy was kept in the hands of the capitalists. What we are currently witnessing are the natural consequences of that deal.

Under capitalism, the great wealth which is created by the South African working class is appropriated by the capitalists. An anarchic and crisis ridden system which relentlessly pursues profits for the few cannot be reconciled with the basic material needs of the masses. This is a generation disillusioned with the results of capitalists democracy, which has not given them much aside from a prospect of a life of unemployment and constant attacks on living standards. And now they are fighting back.

A new generation of fighters

Protests over tuition fees are not a new phenomenon. As part of the general upsurge in the class struggle, they have been ongoing at the poorer black universities for a number of years.  These protests were largely left to fester so long as they were confined to universities such as TUT, UWC, CPUT and Fort Hare. But with the current upheaval at Wits, UCT, Rhodes, etc, the protests have spread to the middle class. This is an indication of the deteriorating material conditions of the masses.

The most militant layer of the protests consists of the so-called “born free” generation, i.e, those born after 1994. This fresh layer of youth is unshackled from the politics of the liberation era and only know the convulsive period we live in now. Outraged by the effects of the crisis of capitalism and galvanised by the local and international fightback by the masses, the youth have taken to the road of struggle.

Thrown into the cauldron, the fresh layers show enormous militancy and heroism but the lack of experience also places many obstacles before the movement. In the initial stages it is only natural that the movement goes through a period of confusion. But in order to succeed and to take the struggle to a higher level it necessary to overcome these weaknesses.

In their fight against the state for free education, the students have shown enormous bravery and sacrifice. The scenes of daily battles at all the universities across the country show the determination and revolutionary zeal of the youth. But the demands of the students have not been met despite a month of intense struggle. This shows that courage and determination alone are not sufficient to win. Had this been the case, capitalism would have been overthrown decades ago. What is needed is a correct programme, correct tactics and a truly fighting leadership.

The student leaders

When the student protests erupted in October 2015 they immediately took the form of a mass movement. The key reason for this was the intervention of the South African Students Congress (SASCO) which was involved from the beginning and provided an important national framework for the movement. Within a week, students began to mobilise not only on their own campuses but also between universities. This mobilisation was then coordinated at a national level. Marches and mass demonstrations were held on consecutive days in Cape Town, Johannesburg and Pretoria to protest at parliament, Luthuli House and at the Union Buildings respectively.

The mass character of the movement came as a shock to the government. Within two weeks the size and increasing militancy of the movement forced the government to announce a freeze in tuition fees in a desperate attempt to put a lid on the protests. This is an important lesson. It was the scale of the protests and the threat it posed to the system that forced the government to retreat.

This year, however, the SASCO leadership has scandalously declined to support and organise the students. On many campuses some SASCO leaders have even spoken against the students and have protected the government. This goes against the whole purpose of SASCO, which was set up by the students to represent them and to fight for good quality and free education. Together with another traditional organisation, the South African Union of Students (SAOS), the SASCO leaders are often seen as being in cahoots with the government. Many of the student leaders are seen as using the movement as a stepping stone to advancing their own political careers.

It is clear that the aim of the concessions to the movement last year was purely to buy time for the government. But while the government was preparing a counterattack over the past year the student leaders at some universities began to shut the movement down. The mass based character and vital coordination between universities was broken and replaced by an atomised movement wherein the numerous demands were fought on a campus-by-campus basis. This false dichotomy which was created between local and national demands led to the atomisation of the movement.

Over the past year, universities across the country have become a hotbed of activity. Protests against a lack of accommodation, financial exclusion, the curriculum, institutional culture and outsourcing of university workers cropped up at almost all universities. But everywhere it lacked the mass character and necessary coordination of last year. Instead of linking up the demands centrally and waging a national struggle against the government and the system as a whole, the movement began to fracture into its different tendencies. The consequence of this was that when the movement erupted again it lacked the nationally coordinated struggle of last year.

This has had very serious consequences for the movement. The actions – or rather, the inaction – of the student leaders has only assisted the government in tiring out and isolating the students. This could lead to the defeat of the movement. Apart from exceptional cases such as at Wits University, the protests have by-passed the official Student Representative Councils at universities.

Organisation

This is a healthy reaction towards the actions of the student leaders, but it does not solve the problems of the movement. The solution to bad leadership is to find better, committed and selfless leaders. The only way to ensure this is to make the leadership structures as democratic and accountable as possible with the right to recall of any leader who fails to carry out the mandates of the students in an acceptable way.

The pitfalls of the atomising of the movement have been apparent. Instead of speaking with one voice, the fractured movements began to speak past each other. This has made the protests more disjointed and the demands less clear. The government and the hostile media have used this incoherence to distort and misrepresent the demands of the students.

The lack of a national and mass based movement also led to the isolation of different groups from the broader student body. Meanwhile the smaller core of the movement, which was radicalised under the crackdown, began to employ tactics such as the burning of libraries, stoning of cars, and other similar actions. This provided the perfect pretext to the state to further isolate student leaders and crack down on the protests. The disconnection between the advanced layers of the students and the wider student base only serves to isolate and fracture the movement, making it easier for the state to clamp down on the protests. This could open the road for a counter-attack by the ruling class.

The lack of national organisations and mass oriented tactics is a clear weakness which the movement must attempt to overcome. It is not possible to fight the centralised capitalist state machine with disunity and disorganisation. The way forward is to build on the best methods of the movement last year: democratic mass student assemblies where everyone is allowed to speak freely and give their opinion. Only in this way can the movement build the necessary momentum and draw in the necessary forces to proceed. These assemblies should choose delegates to a national student congress where all the demands could be taken up on a central basis. The only way to proceed is with maximum unity and organisation. All methods of disunity and atomisation will only mean that it will be easier to isolate the individual groups of protesters and thereby weaken the movement as a whole.

A political struggle

The lack of a national coordination also leads to a political weakness. While the demand for the abolition of university fees is still at the centre of the struggle, this does not exhaust the question of a programme.

Of course, the movement is not uniform but contradictory. The specific conditions and demands vary from one campus to another. The conditions and dynamics at Wits, Rhodes, Stellenbosch and UCT are different from the traditionally black universities like TUT, CPUT, UWC, VUT, etc. This in itself is not a problem. The different layers of society always come to revolutionary conclusions on the basis of their own concrete situations. The key is, however, is to link up the struggles by generalising the local and individual demands into a programme which can unify the struggles on a national scale and draw in new layers. The more localised the coordination of the movement remains, the harder it is to develop such a programme.

While the movement was initially sparked by the raising of tuition fees, the demands have gradually expanded to areas such as as tuition funding for poorer students, reduction of the university managers’ incomes, an end to outsourcing, raising government funding for higher education, cancellation of student debt as well as racial inequality issues. But these demands are not centralised and also don’t quite reflect the real stage at which the movement is at. The violent crackdown of the police and the coordinated efforts of the bourgeoisie to crush the movement has pushed the movement far beyond the initial aims and demands towards a direct struggle against the Zuma government. The demand for the fall of the Security Cluster and the Minister of Education would help focus the movement and would find a wide echo amongst wide layers of the working class. But the demands of the movement, insofar as they exist, mainly reflect the initial phases of the movement.

The working class

While the youth can play an important part in the class struggle, they cannot directly influence economy or the key levers of power in society. As we have stated above, the student protests are part of the broader class struggle, which in turn is a result of the crisis of capitalism. Due to their role in the large scale production process, the workers are central to any action to fight the capitalist system. The limitations of the movement to purely a student strike can be seen in the current protests. While they have succeeded in disrupting the normal functioning of the universities, they have had no effect on the functioning of the economy. The mines, banks, supermarkets and factories are all running normally. It is therefore crucial for the student movement to find ways of linking up with broader layers of the workers and the poor.

Last year, the movement led straight to a campaign against outsourcing at the universities. This instinctive turn of the students toward the working class was a huge step forward. Significant victories were won at a number of universities. It is necessary expand this method, broaden the scope of the campaign and raise the level of the movement.

The student struggle must be linked up with the struggles of the working class as a whole by developing a systematic approach to the workers. Firstly, the main demands of the workers, including an end to labour brokers, a living wage and an end to service delivery cuts, should be a key part of the students’ programme. This should be accompanied by student delegations being sent to all the big factories and big enterprises to appeal to the workers.

A revolutionary leadership

Those who oppose the struggle of the youth on the grounds that they do not have a clear programme should explain where such a programme should come from. It is a fact that of all the organisations which were built to represent the South African masses, none of them has managed to serve their purpose in this struggle.

The ANC leadership which dominates the government has been the main perpetrator of attacks against the youth and the working class in the past period. All of its infighting factions are completely out of touch with the daily day life of the masses. The “Communists” have also joined the government as cabinet ministers and are complicit in the relentless assault on the material conditions of the workers and students. The General Secretary of the “Communist” party as a Cabinet  Minister of Higher Education is actively fighting against the demand for free education! The distance between the mass of youth and the youth wings of organisations such as the ANC Youth League has grown into an abyss.

The EFF leaders have been the only ones to support the movement, but Julius Malema has been seen as using the movement for his own narrow means. His recent flirtations with capitalist elements from the DA and the Mantashe wing of the ANC as well as his watered down programme for the latest local elections has undermined the EFF amongst the most advanced youth.

The trade unions have also not tried to link up the struggles of workers and students. The right wing leaders of COSATU participated in a low-key march on 14 October to the Chamber of Mines. But they have not provided a clear programme to take the movement forward. In fact, the march was reduced to simply “appealing” to the mining bosses to provide funds toward higher education! This was a classic example of the COSATU office bearers taking the steam out of the situation and effectively trying to demobilise the students. As for the left wing of the trade union movement – in particular NUMSA –  it has only given the minimum of support. Although it has supported the students in words, it has not done anything to help the movement overcome its weaknesses in practice. It has also not mobilised in anyway against the violent crackdown of the security forces and the apartheid era tactics used by the state.

For the past three years, NUMSA has talked about setting up a socialist party. Should this materialise, it would change the whole political landscape. Its leaders are missing a golden opportunity. The conditions for launching a fighting party of the working class are extremely favourable. The presence of the most radical layers of the youth on the streets is clear confirmation of this. The South African masses are taking to the road of struggle, but they do not have a revolutionary leadership to unify their struggles and aim them at the real cause of all of their problems – the capitalist system.

Fight for Socialism

Since 1994 enrolments at universities have more than doubled. In order to offer loans to poor students, the National Students Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) was established. Since then NSFAS has provided assistance to more than 1.4 million. But while the enrolment at universities has grown exponentially, funding to higher education has decreased as the government has tried to cap a growing budget deficit. In the period from 2000 to 2012 state funding for higher education declined in real terms by 1.1% of GDP. The proportion of GDP spent on higher education in 2015 has dropped to 0.7% which is low by international standards. And in order to mitigate the shortfall, universities have increased tuition fees.

At the same time, the burden on students increased from 24% to 31%. At the end of 2012 student debt increased from R2.6 billion to R3.4 billion. The NSFAS also ran into a crisis. The crisis of youth unemployment and the inability to pay back the loans meant that outstanding debt to NSFAS has grown to nearly R20 billion. Youth unemployment increased to 55% which means that many new graduates could not be absorbed into the labour market. The so-called “skills shortage” which is needed in the economy is therefore the result of the workings of capitalism. Enormous human potential goes to waste because the system cannot make optimal use of it. So what started out as initiatives to reform the system have run into the laws of the capitalist system. The crisis has once again exposed the limits of reformism.

The demands of the students and of the working class are in direct conflict with the private ownership of the means of production. All the wealth of society is in the hands of a small minority, the capitalist class. Yet all this wealth is created by the working class. It is therefore a prime necessity for the working class to put an end to this state of affairs by taking the ownership of the economy out of the hands of the capitalist class. The Freedom Charter states: “The People must share in the country’s wealth! The mineral wealth beneath the soil, the banks and monopoly industries shall be transferred to the ownership of the people as a whole!” Only by expropriating the capitalists will it be possible to put the huge resources of the country to use for the whole of society and not the privilege of the few.

Fuente: https://www.marxist.com/south-africa-the-fight-for-free-education-and-the-lessons-of-the-student-movement.htm

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La sombra del Apartheid sobre el sistema educativo en Sudáfrica.

Unas de las leyes más retrogradas fue el sistema educativo llamado Bantu, el cual se esforzó en atrofiar el desarrollo de la persona africana, asegurando que estuvieran bajo el control del hombre blanco.

Por: Khavheni Shope Telesur TV.

Escribir sobre el sistema educativo en Sudáfrica necesitaría un análisis más profuso que el que acá presentamos, pues para comprender la situación de los estudiantes es necesario verla como la continuación de una historia traumática. Para abordar los obstáculos evidentes en las instituciones académicas en unificar la dualidad de una educación que tiende a determinar su calidad y duración en función del estado socioeconómico, la cual es frecuentemente inextricable del color. Esto se traduce en una pequeña porción de la población es la que recibe los conocimientos que les permitirían acceder empleos en altos rangos, y la situación se agrava con el hecho de que la interconexión profesional en estos espacios empiezan al dentro de las salas de clase de las escuelas privadas o los campus universitarios, a los cuales el acceso ha demostrado ser más selectivo que inclusivo.

Además, esta división también existe entre aquellos que tienen el privilegio financiero para asistir a las escuelas privadas pero están todavía sometidos a un ambiente pedagógico atrincherado en una experiencia patriarcal y de supremacía blanca que pretende marginar la experiencia de los estudiantes negros. Ya sea debido a una falta de representación o a la dificultad de relacionarse con los profesores, la manera altiva en que a los estudiantes se les indica cómo llevar su cabello, el sistema epistemológico eurocentrista que construye su marco curricular, o cómo se les desaliente a hablar las lenguas africanas; y sucede lo mismo cuando los estudiantes negros vienen de una posición socioeconómica privilegiada, ellos están sometidos a sentirse como que no pertenecen, lo que es irónico pues esta es su tierra ancestral.

Estos asuntos son algunos de los problemas que avivaron movimientos como #RhodesMustFall, #FeesMustFall y #StopRacismAtPretoriaGirlsHigh, que han llamado atención sobre el apuro de numerosos jóvenes a nivel nacional. Por lo tanto, para rastrear la fuente de la crisis de la educación debemos revisar las leyes implementadas bajo el régimen del apartheid que aseguró que la población negra se quedara en constante esclavitud por la parte de los blancos.

Ya con esta introducción, nos enfocaremos en el vínculo existente entre la calidad de la enseñanza primaria y secundaria, y la asistencia y el rendimiento académico en la educación universitaria, así como la discordancia entre el costo de las universidades públicas y el sueldo promedio del sudafricano común.

La Dualidad del sistema pedagógico en Sudáfrica

Unas de las leyes más retrógradas fue el sistema educativo llamado Bantu, el cual se esforzó en atrofiar el desarrollo de la persona africana, asegurando que estuvieran bajo el control del hombre blanco. Denigró la historia, cultura e identidad africana tanto como impuso los estereotipos raciales y mitos. Lamentablemente, a más de dos décadas después de 1994 muchas instituciones educativas sudafricanas están bajo la sombra del antiguo régimen, donde las personas de estratos sociales desfavorecidos ven sus esfuerzos truncados al intentar romper el ciclo de pobreza, en un sistema que no les concede las mismas oportunidades que sus homólogos más pudientes, lo cual contribuye al alto nivel de desigualdad social en el país.

Según el artículo “South Africa’s Education Crisis: The Quality of Education from 1994-2011” escrito por Nic Spaull, hay una correlación directa entre la calidad, duración y tipo de educación y perspectivas del mercado laboral: “el bajo rendimiento refuerza la desigualdad social y resulta en que los niños heredan la posición social de sus padres a pesar de su motivación o habilidad”. Esta afirmación muestra la falsedad de la percepción común equivocada que el apartheid terminó y que aquellos que viven todavía en la pobreza es porque son ‘perezosos’. El artículo señala que en 2014, entre el 70% y el 80 % de alumnos recibieron educación primera y secundaria de baja calidad con una alta tasa de deserción escolar, de estos 35% estaban desempleados, 18% tuvieron trabajos poco calificados y 32% en empleos subcalificados, como dependientes o personal de tiendas. La minoría, entre el 20 y el 25% con altas posiciones socioeconómicas, recibieron educación de alta calidad y asistieron a instituciones de enseñanza superior donde lograron obtener una licenciatura, en consecuencia, alcanzaron trabajos e ingresos de alta productividad, apenas un 15% de la población total llegue a este nivel de privilegio.

Además, Spaull nota que a partir del tercer año de la primaria, el 60% de los estudiantes de las escuelas más pobres tienen un retraso de tres años respecto a sus homólogos en escuelas de mayor calidad, donde solo pueden asistir estudiantes de familias adineradas. Esto implica que para los estudiantes de las escuelas más pobres, mientras avanzan más en sus estudios, más se retrasan y hay mayores posibilidades de que abandonen sus estudios. Para ilustrar este asunto, debe tomarse en cuenta que hay aproximadamente 1 millón de alumnos en cada año hasta el noveno, cuando la cantidad empieza a caer radicalmente.

En 2014, de un conjunto total de 1.085.570 estudiantes, 532 860 estudiantes tomaron los exámenes finales del bachillerato, de los cuales 403.874 lo aprobaron. El cálculo de la tasa de aprobados, surge de la división del número de estudiantes que aprobaron por el número de estudiantes que tomaron la prueba, multiplicado por 100, lo que era calculado como: 403.874/532.869*100= 75.8%. Sin embargo, una cifra realista habría sido dividir 403.874 entre la cantidad total de estudiantes que potencialmente podía tomar los exámenes finales, es decir, 1.085.570; por tanto, la tasa de aprobados real de este año fue 37.2%. El 62.8% de jóvenes que debieron culminar exitosamente su bachillerato no lo hicieron, no tuvieron la oportunidad inscribirse en las universidades.

Una alternativa para estos estudiantes es la Enseñanza y Formación Técnica y Profesional (TVET por sus siglas en inglés), que ofrece formación técnica en un campo específico y que los prepararía para un empleo. El requisito mínimo es que los estudiantes hayan cumplido su noveno año de la escuela secundaria y que tengan 16 años o más. Al mismo tiempo, la falla crucial de esta forma de educación superior es que produce capital humano muy especializado, y que por tanto, puede estancar su movilidad profesional y permitirles menos oportunidades que aquellos conocimientos obtenidos en la universidad. Lo que significará que estos jóvenes no podrán diversificar sus experiencias profesionales de igual forma que sus homólogos en otras instituciones. Otra de las aristas de este tema que destaca el estudio «A Skills beyond school Review of South Africa» (Simon et al.,2014), es que los institutos del TVET tienen una capacidad limitada, además del hecho de que pueda existir una disparidad en la herramientas enseñadas y aquellas que se requieren en el mercado laboral, lo que hace que los empleadores se resistan a interactuar con el sector educativo y por tanto, hace aún más difícil que estos jóvenes encuentren empleos rentables que les facilite a ellos y a sus familias mejorar sus condiciones de vida.

Barreras financieras en la educación superior

Además de los problemas que enfrenta la calidad de la educación básica, otro que prevalece es el del financiamiento. En 2015, el primer año de matrícula universitaria oscilaba entre los $2.035 USD y los $4.000 USD, dependiendo de las carrera a estudiar y de la institución elegida, sin incluir los gastos de vivienda y manutención. Hay que tomar en cuenta que estos gastos son apenas para el primer año de estudios, este gasto deberá hacerse los próximos 2 o 3 años, además deberán pagar el incremento anual y los gastos extras. Si la matrícula tiene ese costo, a la vez que el promedio del salario mensual para el 60% de los trabajadores de acuerdo con los datos del Sindicato Sudafricano de Trabajadores era de unos $361 USD en 2014, cómo es que esta mayoría de la población sudafricana va a poder acceder a la educación superior, no solo a inscribirlos en el primer año, sino a asegurar que se gradúen.

La educación es un proceso acumulativo que inicia con una fundación sólida que permite construir las competencias y acumular la experiencia necesaria para la vida profesional y en general para el crecimiento social. Es responsabilidad del gobierno y de las distintas autoridades educativas el reforzamiento de las instituciones de educación primaria y secundaria, para ofrecer a todos los educandos la misma oportunidad de desarrollar sus estudios. Otro enfoque es el incremento al acceso a instituciones terciarias, lo que las hace un derecho no un privilegio. Mientras más estudiantes africanos negros sean exitosos en la vida académica, se hará mas diverso este ambiente y se generará un conocimiento más representativo.

Una sociedad bien educada es más productiva y por tanto tendrá mejores capacidades para competir en el mundo globalizado. Es crucial asegurar que la educación en el país ofrezca las mismas oportunidades para todos aquellos que quieren formarse, sin importar su raza o cuánto tienen en sus cuentas bancarias.

Fuente: http://www.telesurtv.net/opinion/La-sombra-del-Apartheid-sobre-el-sistema-educativo-en-Sudafrica-20161021-0045.html

Imagen: http://www.telesurtv.net/__export/1477081198188/sites/telesur/img/opinion/2016/10/21/girlchild-574×287.jpg_1718483347.jpg

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Sudáfrica: 831 detenidos por violencia en protestas universitarias.

Cargos que incluyen la violencia, intimidación y daños intencionados a la propiedad pesan hoy sobre al menos 831 personas detenidas por la policía sudafricana durante la ola de protestas en universidades del país.

África/Sudáfrica/01.11.2016/Autor y Fuente:http://prensa-latina.cu/

Así lo informó el teniente general Kgomotso Phahlane, comisionado nacional interino de Policía en un reciente encuentro con la prensa para actualizar sobre las movilizaciones del #FeesMustFall.

Cuando comenzaron las protestas estaban dentro de los campus, pero ahora han salido de las universidades y han incendiado coches, entre otros hechos, dijo.

‘Esto es evidencia subrayó Phahlane que las manifestaciones fueron infiltradas por el comportamiento criminal.

Advirtió que la violencia y los actos delictivos que se cometen son los que han provocado la presencia de la policía, que actúa bajo el mandato previsto en la Constitución. A su vez hizo hincapié ‘en que no hay lugar para la brutalidad policial’.

Cualquier ciudadano que sienta que sus derechos fueron transgredidos por alguna acción de la policía deberá notificarlo para su investigación, enfatizó el Comisionado.

Las movilizaciones, que dejaron ya el saldo lamentable de dos muertes asociadas, iniciaron a partir del anuncio el 19 de septiembre del eventual incremento en 2017 de las tasas de matrícula en las universidades públicas del país.

El ministro de Educación Superior, Blade Nzimande, puntualizó en aquel momento que el alza de los tributos sería hasta el tope de ocho por ciento y que era una responsabilidad individual de cada una de las instituciones decidirla.

Al mismo tiempo, aclaró que de la medida se exceptuaban los jóvenes de familias menos favorecidas y que reciben ayuda del gobierno.

El partido oficialista Congreso Nacional Africano (ANC) reiteró hace poco en un comunicado su compromiso con lograr una educación gratuita y de calidad en un futuro no lejano, algo en lo que considera se han dado pasos.

Una generalización del movimiento #FeesMustFall, hizo que el presidente Jacob Zuma decretara el ‘cero aumento’ de las cuotas en 2016.

Para Nzimande detrás de estas protestas hay una agenda política.

Fuente: http://prensa-latina.cu/index.php?o=rn&id=37928&SEO=sudafrica-831-detenidos-por-violencia-en-protestas-universitarias
Imagen: http://img.over-blog-kiwi.com/0/86/47/94/20160704/ob_674488_1345374183-0.jpg
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