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Cape Town’s safety is afraid of parents to look for old white schools

The fear of crime and violence of criminals in the most famous townships in South Africa forces other parents to make difficult decisions to send their children every day to previous schools.

“Thusks can go to school with teacher firearms, take their laptops in the presence of the students,” Sibhlehle Smaba told BBC as a school of her sons stay in Khayelitsha, in the largest township in Cape Town.

“Think about your child regularly. No security at school even if there are any powerful do anything about it.”

Over three decades since the end of white governance – lesser rulership in South Africa, but black students should endure inequalities that were a bed of apartheid.

Ms Mbalana feels like her three children are the inheritance of the death – especially affecting her oldest son in the township in the township between six and 10 years.

Some of the main rules of apartheid apartheid was human education law in the 1953, which aims to prevent black children from reaching their full skills. This has created funded schools with no money and procedures for those in needy places, to this day suffering and often suffer from the high crime, drug abuse and violence.

Mbana, who grew up in the Eastern Cape, who grew up in Khayelitsha when he was 18, decided that Anani, 25-year-old, near the Cape Leave Leave Home.

Boys are mixed with her seven-year-old sister at school, with better places and a small class size.

“I told myself [that] Beauty couldn’t do that [local] School because I have endured many things and those two boys when they were at school, “34-year-old Class Designer.

He and his husband would like to move their families away completely and khayelitsha.

“We don’t want to live in the township, but we must live here because we can’t sign in,” he said.

“Talk to anyone in the township and they will tell you that they will go out for the opportunity to start if they can.”

Ca’mohoster is the fastest growing stacking township [AFP/Getty Images]

There is no doubt that in the township schools, led by principals of vision and hard workers, who have done miracles despite adverse infrastructure issues.

However, safety and security has shown intensity to others there, for example, criminal groups seeking careers for teacher protection.

Baseline Website Conducted That Teachers in North Education Primary School in the Philippi in the Mpumalanga, allegedly being told to pay 10% wage seemed to work out.

“It is not safe at all. We are at high risk,” said one teacher telling a Ground.

“These giant groups come to the gunmen – dangerous. Our health is at risk. Teachers at school requested a transfer because they feel safe.”

According to the Western Cape Education Department (WCED), WCED), a private safety company is now to be built at school and the police are traveling nearby.

But the same events reportedly occurred in other schools in the surrounding areas of the Month, Philippian and Samora Machel.

Sipho (L) and Sibize Mbasana Pose for a camera in their car and their daughter Beauty, wearing a Jumper school uniform, with the White Shirt, smiling between them as dependent on the back seat.

Sipho and Sibhlehle Smabasa started school in Smon’s Town now [Sibahle Mbasana]

“My husband Sipho works at Simon’s town and walked there and thought it would be safe and very comfortable that my children went to that school,” Mmmana said.

But for a long time, usually by bus or teat taxi, safe schools come with their risks and pressures.

“My children wake up about 4.30 in the morning to go 5.50 am when Sipho walks. When he continued to work elsewhere,” said Mbana.

“They are always tired and want to sleep. They are strong because they do their homework, but they sleep more than other children.”

The Lijhate makes the national articles last year when his demands after being compelled to go to Simon’s town and to Khayelitsha as a bus that often refuses his ticket.

The driver was also appointed after contrary to the company policy, requiring employees to help schoolchildren who lost their tickets.

As the darkness falls, it was Mrs Mrsana the worse when Anane called his best friend was not allowed inside.

However, many social media was followed by several fortunes – sometimes a boy was offered a good Samaritan Samaritan who disposed him at a petrol station for 5km in his home.

From there he walked on a guard with a guard who lived in his area before taking his home back to his family released by police and joined himself.

The Bay Viewpoint When Simon's City is formed - a beautiful blueyard, boats, port, mountain, and white houses built on the coast.

If the traffic is just a little less than an hour by car from Khayohxsha to reach Simon’s city, the home of the mansman Navy [Universal Images Group/Getty Images]

His case highlighted the grief of thousands of disciples from townships and made a circle trip to 80km in low-quality areas or used only white students in the apartheid.

Rich citizens of these underground areas usually receive private education their own, meaning that state schools are often more than spaces of those from a continuous AFIELD.

Donovan Williams, Pover – The principal of the Premary School in Observatory – Bohemian City of Cape Town, said about 85% of School School around the nearly 830 days.

“Some parents work in this area while most spending a lot of money to distribute their children to schools with better infrastructure,” he told BBC.

“Sometimes they sleep in the classroom.”

According to Amnesty International, South Africa has one of the world’s most unequal school programs – with a child’s effect it depends on their country of birth, wealth and color.

“Children at the top 200 schools reach extra differences in mathematics than children at 6,600 future schools.

State schools are sponsored, but the parents still have to pay the school fees, where the Western Cape can range from between $ 60 (£ 45) and $ 6,500 (£ 3,350) per year.

In approximately 1,700 schools in the province near the province, more than 100 are the fees payable as government students live in economic depressed areas.

The provincial education department explains that often cover money laundering – and schools in many middle-class areas are turning to parents to cover cost.

Recently 2,407 teaching posts had been lost in the province as the government allocated to 64% at the cost of the salary discounted at all times, the WCED.

The reduction of the posts means that certain contractors are not rejected by their contracts when their contracts end in December, while some of some teachers are asked to have schools.

“We are in a possible situation, and it is not our own, and the Western Cape is not the end of the affected province,” the WPED is installed.

Two South African school children - Black, one white - both the South African flag painted with their faces.

After the end of apartheid 1994 there was a major hope that the deracstegation brought the playing field for all [AFP/Getty Images]

The National National Country Teacher (Naastopha) reports that this decision has been severely damaged schools in poor and full crime.

“Schools that hear the actual impact of your normal township school.

“They heard a cut, they would have chief classes of class, and they would have the most oppressed teachers.

“Children, especially those who are less inclined to study, will tread on cracks.”

Experts blame the advances in debt for African Nelson Mandela’s government and died in 1994 since the apartheid state.

“The ANC had to face the fact that it was unable to bring,” Stem Fataar, Professor of Transformation in Stellenbosch University at Stellenbosch University at Stellenbosch University, told BBC.

In the face of fees “poor schools are never given the opportunity to develop a sustainable training and learning platform”, he said.

“Political interest in the township schools have lost some 20 years ago. When teachers expenses and teachers’ expenses – teachers can see that those schools continue to carry cuts.”

Professor Fataar blooms equally for the future: “I don’t see, hold miracle, how we can raise money for poor schools.”

Parents like the companies, adhering to townships and often have a mercy of criminal groups, have been exhausted.

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