1. Child Labor in South Africa
In 1999, a child labor survey conducted by the South Africa Statistical Agency
in cooperation with the International Labor Organization’s International Program
on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC) estimated that 36 percent of children
between the ages of 5 and 17 in South Africa were working. 1597 Working children
are more prevalent in rural areas and in the agricultural sector than in urban
areas. A higher proportion of children in rural areas worked (63.5 percent)
than children living on commercial farms (47.5 percent), in informal urban areas
(41.5 percent), and in formal urban areas (23.4 percent).1598 Around 59 percent
of working children in South Africa work for at least three hours per week in
the agricultural sector, while roughly 33 percent worked in trade-related activities
for three or more hours per week.1599 Within
the agricultural sector, working children are more prevalent on subsistence
farms than on commercial farms.1600
Child labor in commercial agriculture is most visible in the Western Cape,
Free State, Mpumalanga, and the Northern Province.1601 Children can be found
particularly on smaller, labor-intensive farms planting and harvesting vegetables,
picking and packing fruit, and cutting flowers.1602 Some children working on
commercial farms are children of adult farm workers while others are from neighboring
villages or townships.1603 They are often not
employed directly by farmers but assist their parents, who are paid on a
piece-work basis.1604
Children often work as domestic servants. This practice appears to be especially
prevalent on farms, in rural areas, and among children from migrant populations.1605
There are also reports of children working in coal yards.1606
1597 This statistic includes children who work at least three hours per week
in economic activities (fetching wood and/or water, unpaid domestic work, or
economic activities for pay, profit, or family gain), five hours per week in
school labor (school maintenance, cleaning or school improvement activities),
and seven hours for household chores (work in the family home, where the child’s
parent, grandparent or spouse is present). Statistics South Africa, Child
Labor in South Africa: Surveys of Activities of Young People 1999 (Draft),
tables [hereinafter Surveys of Activities of Young People 1999 ] http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/simpoc/southafrica/report/
index.htm on 12/18/01.
The incidence of child labor varies amongst children from the four main racial
categories recognized in South Africa: “African,” “colored,” “Indian,” and “white.”1607 Child labor appears to be most prevalent among African children. According
to the 1999 government survey, a greater percentage of African children work
(51.9 percent) than colored children (27 percent), Indian children (11.5 percent),
or white children (11.4 percent).1608 A greater proportion of African working
children (62.9 percent) engage in agricultural work, as compared to colored
working children (39.4 percent), Indian working children (3.1 percent), and
white working children (28 percent).1609 On the
other hand, 52.5 percent of Indian and 50.1 percent of white working children
work in trading activities.1610
According to the survey results, child labor appears to be somewhat more prevalent
among female than male children. Among working children between the ages of
10 and 14 years, girls made up roughly 55 percent of the group as compared to
some 45 percent for boys.1611 A larger number
of female children than male children were involved in service occupations.1612
There are reports that commercial sexual exploitation of children may be growing
in South Africa. There are no accurate statistics for the number of children
engaged in prostitution, but one NGO estimates that there are 10,000 children
among the some 40,000 prostitutes working in the Johannesburg area alone.1613
In Johannesburg, children as young as 8 years old have been found in brothels,
and a large number of boys, particularly those trying to survive on the streets,
are also reportedly drawn into prostitution.1614 Child prostitutes are particularly
sought after because they are believed to be disease-free or because of the
belief that having sex with a virgin cures diseases such as HIV/AIDS. As South
Africa becomes an increasingly popular tourist destination, cities like Cape
Town and Durban are becoming destinations for tourists seeking sex with minors.1615
Children are also allegedly exploited sexually in return for the liquidation of
family debts or to raise income for the family.1616
South Africa is thought to be one of the main trafficking centers in Africa,
both as a receiver country and as a transit point. Young girls from neighboring
countries such as Mozambique and Zambia have reportedly been found working in
the sex industry in South Africa, sometimes lured with promises of employment
but then sold into the sex industry.1617 It is also thought that children are
trafficked to countries such as the U.S., Israel, and Russia through South Africa.1618
There are unconfirmed reports that South Africa may also be a source country for
children trafficked to European countries.1619
There is a growing sense that the HIV/AIDS epidemic in South Africa is leading
to an increase in the incidence of child labor. As more and more individuals
die from the disease, the number of child-headed households has increased. According
to ILO-IPEC, these “HIV/AIDS orphans” are often forced into the worst forms of
labor.1620
2. Children’s Participation in School
Primary school attendance rates are unavailable for South Africa. While enrollment
rates indicate a level of commitment to education, they do not always reflect
a child’s participation in school.1621 School enrollment in South Africa has
increased from 10 million in 1991 to over 12 million in 1998, an annual growth
rate of 2.8 percent.1622 The net enrollment rate for primary schools in 1997
was 87.1 percent,1623 suggesting that universal primary education for the official
primary school age group has not yet been achieved.1624
The net enrollment rate was slightly higher for male children (87.9 percent)
than for female children (86.3 percent).1625
There are numerous barriers to school attendance. From 1948 to 1994, a succession
of apartheid-driven policies resulted in social inequalities along racial lines,
and black South Africans in particular were deprived of opportunities to access
basic social services, including education. Many schools continue to face significant
problems that have a negative impact on the quality of education. There are
high student to teacher ratios (36:1 in primary schools in 1996),1626 a high
percentage of unqualified or under-qualified teachers, and a poor physical environment
at schools, including lack of sanitation facilities, electricity, and appropriate
teaching materials. Parents must pay school fees, and though no student may
legally be denied admission to a public school if they cannot or do not pay
the school fee, there are additional costs such as transportation and school
uniforms that nevertheless prevent many children from attending school.1627
According to the 1999 survey, relatively few child workers between the ages
of 5 and 17 stated that working kept them out of school (0.9 percent of female
and 5.9 percent of male children).1628 Most children between the ages of 5
and 17 were involved in economic activities for three or more hours per week
for pay, profit or family economic gain combined work and schooling (90.8 percent).1629
Most child workers (50.5 percent) worked after school, while 29.2 percent worked
on weekends and holidays, and 3.8 percent worked during school hours.1630
Among older children, 16 to 17 years old, there seems to be no significant
difference in educational attainment between those who worked and those who did
not work, but there are differences among younger children. Among children 13
years of age, for example, only 17 percent of those who worked had completed at
least seven years of schooling compared to 40 percent of those who did not work.1631
3. Child Labor Law and Enforcement
The Constitution of South Africa includes broad protections for children while
specific laws regulate the conditions under which children are allowed to work.
Section 28 of the Constitution provides that every child, defined as a person
under 18 years of age, has the right to be protected from exploitative labor
practices and not to perform work or provide services that are inappropriate
for that child’s age or risk the child’s well-being, education, physical or
mental health, or spiritual, moral or social development.1632 The Basic Conditions
of Employment Act, 1997 (BCEA)–the primary piece of legislation governing
working conditions–also prohibits the employment of children in work that is
“inappropriate” for their age or that places their well- being, education,
physical or mental health, or spiritual, moral, or social development at risk.1633
The minimum age for employment in South Africa is 15. Section 43 of the BCEA
prohibits the employment of children who under 15 years of age or who are still
subject to compulsory schooling.1634 For children over the age of 15, the BCEA
provides for the adoption of additional regulations prohibiting or placing
conditions on their employment.1635
Employment of children is defined as a criminal offense in the BCEA and carries
a maximum penalty of three years in jail. In addition, it is a violation to
assist an employer who violates the BCEA or to discriminate against a person
who refuses to allow children to be employed.1636
The South Africa Schools Act also provides for the prosecution of persons who
prevent a child under 15 years of age from attending school in order to work,
and labor inspectors can assist the Department of Education to enforce the
requirements of this act.1637
Regulations for children who are working informally, for example as self-employed
workers or service workers, are not as extensive as those for children working
as formal employees. The BCEA does not apply to this type of work unless the
work constitutes forced labor. However, the Child Care Act and the South Africa
Schools Act may each be used to enforce minimum age of employment laws among
children who are engaged in these types of non-formal employment.1638
Laws and regulations regarding the commercial sexual exploitation of children
are currently being revised. The Sexual Offences Act No. 23 of 1957 makes prostitution
an offence regardless of the age of the offender; children who are victims of
commercial sexual exploitation can, therefore, be arrested for prostitution.
However, according to an ILO study, the approach of the office of National Director
of Public Prosecutions is to refer such matters to a children’s court to determine
whether the child is in need of care, and the prosecution of persons exploiting
children is pursued.1639 In addition, the South
African Law Commission project committee on sexual offences is currently
drafting a new Sexual Offences Act, which reportedly recommends a complete
prohibition on the commercial sexual exploitation of children, including child
prostitution, child pornography, and trafficking in children.1640
Neither child sex exploitation nor child pornography is covered by the BCEA
unless the work constitutes forced labor. However, the government passed an
amendment to the Child Care Act in 1999 that prohibits the commercial sexual
exploitation of children in a similar but much more comprehensive manner than
the Sexual Offences Act, 1957.1641 Under this amendment, any person who is
involved, directly or indirectly, in the commercial sexual exploitation of children
is guilty of an offence and is liable for a fine and/or a maximum prison sentence
of 10 years. It also makes the owner, lessor, manager, tenant or occupier of
property on which the commercial sexual exploitation of children may occur
liable for failing to report such occurrences to the police. In addition, an
amendment to the Films and Publication Act, which came into force on April 30,
2000, makes it illegal for a person to create, produce, import or possess a
publication of children pornography or to create, distribute, produce or possess
such a film.1642
Law enforcement, however, is reportedly lax, and there are problems in the
investigation, charging, and sentencing of offenders.1643
The BCEA prohibits all forms of forced labor.1644
Section 28 of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution (1996) also prohibits the
use of children in armed conflicts or paramilitary groups.1645
With the passage of the BCEA in 1997, the South African Department of Labor
(SADOL) is now the primary government entity responsible for monitoring compliance
with and enforcing South Africa’s labor laws, including provisions on child
labor. There are approximately 600 labor inspectors throughout South Africa
who focus on the BCEA,1646 and they check for child labor incidence as part
of their inspections.1647 Social workers often accompany labor inspectors on
their inspections, and labor inspectors are able to assist the Department of
Welfare and the Department of Education enforce the provisions of the Child
Care Act and South Africa Schools Act which have a direct bearing on child labor.1648 However, officials from SADOL report that few child labor cases have actually
been prosecuted,1649 and they attempt to
resolve problems by counseling employers, child workers, and parents.1650
South Africa ratified ILO Convention No. 138 on the Minimum Age for Employment
on March 30, 2000, and ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor
on June 7, 2000.1651 South Africa has also ratified the African Charter on
the Rights and Welfare of the Child, 1990. In 2000, South Africa ratified the
optional protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement
of children in armed conflict.
4. Addressing Child Labor and Promoting Schooling
a. Child Labor Initiatives
Governmental bodies and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in South Africa
have taken steps to address child labor. Before and after promulgating the BCEA,
the government coordinated ad hoc meetings with stakeholders actively
involved on child labor issues. These meetings eventually led to the formation of a national stakeholders forum –
the Child Labor Inter- sectoral Group (CLIG) – in 1997.1652 There are also
10 CLIGS located in the provinces. The CLIG focuses on raising awareness and
coordinates and monitors services provided by the government and NGOs. The CLIG
adopted the South African Child Labor Action Program, which was developed in
February 1998 by a workshop of stakeholders, and presented it to the National
Program of Action Steering Committee (NPA) for formal endorsement.1653 SADOL,
the Department of Welfare, and other stakeholders belonging to the CLIG have
developed an enforcement policy to guide the implementation of the BCEA’s
provisions on child labor and to train labor inspectors.1654
Within the government, other ministries in addition to SADOL have taken an
active role in child labor initiatives. The South African Department of Welfare,
a member of the CLIG, administers a number of social safety net programs that
help prevent children from entering the workforce. These include the Child Support
Grant for families with children up to 7 years of age and the Flagship Programs
for Women with Children (under 5 years of age) train women and build their capacity
in business skills, nutrition, and childcare.1655
In addition, the Department of Welfare administers a family allowance program
that provides cash benefits to low income persons caring for children under the
age of 18 and disability and death programs that also provide cash benefits.
1656
In 1997, South Africa developed a National Plan of Action against the
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children. This plan has reportedly enabled
South Africa to use a systematic approach to addressing commercial sexual
exploitation of children.1657
In 1998, the Government of South Africa signed a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) with the ILO. With support from the ILO, SADOL and Statistics South Africa
carried out the Survey of Activities of Young People in South Africa
, a comprehensive survey on the nature and extent of child labor in South Africa.
The government has developed a close working relationship with several children’s
rights NGOs. The Network Against Child Labor (NACL) – dedicated solely to combating
child labor – is made up of about 50 member organizations and was established
to feed into structures set up by the CLIG. The aim of the NACL is to end the
economic exploitation of children through their labor by raising public
awareness, advocacy, policy-making, research, networking, and legal and oral
interventions.1658
The South Africa National Council for Child and Family Welfare has been active
in fighting the commercial sexual exploitation of children as part of a general
child welfare movement. There are 167 child welfare societies around the country with approximately
80 more in development.1659 The Council instituted a media campaign against
child prostitution and other forms of sexual exploitation and lobbied various
government ministries to address the problem of commercial sexual exploitation
of children. The Council has also conducted educational and awareness-raising
programs at schools and has provided services directly to families.1660 There
are shelters that assist children in prostitution in their recovery and reintegration
into society; the Salvation Army Social Services manages the Ethembeni
Children’s Home, a residential program for child prostitutes that sends the
children back to school or for skills training.1661
NGOs such as the South African National Council for Child and Family Welfare
have begun working specifically with HIV/AIDS orphans. The government and individual
businesses have also begun numerous HIV/AIDS education and prevention programs
in an effort to halt and reverse the rate of infection among adults.
b. Educational Alternatives
Since the transition to a democratically elected government in 1994, South
Africa has engaged in fundamental education reforms designed to increase access
to and the quality of education. The Constitution states that every person has
a right to basic education and that the State must do all that is reasonable
to ensure that everyone receives a basic education.
The South African Schools Act (1996) replaced the Education Acts of the
apartheid government and paved the way for a single, non-racial school system.
The Schools Act asserts that all individuals have a right to access basic and
quality education and may not be discriminated against, and makes schooling
compulsory for children between the ages of 7 and 15 years or a total of nine
years. The act prohibits public schools from refusing admission to any student
on the grounds that his/her parent is unable to pay or has not paid school fees.
The National Education Policy Act (1996) also prohibits schools from denying
admission or otherwise discriminating against a student for not paying school
fees.1662
The South African Qualifications Authority Act (1995) provides for the establishment
of an integrated national framework for learning achievements in order to enhance
access to, as well as mobility and progression within, the educational system.
It further aims to enhance the quality of education and training and accelerate
the redress of past discrimination in education, training, and employment opportunities.1663 The Admission Policy for Ordinary Public Schools 1998 strives to improve
the internal efficiency of the education system by curbing the high repetition
rate of students. It places the onus on schools to place learners who are above
the “normal” age for a grade in a “fast-track facility” to help bring them in
line with their peers.1664
The government is attempting to achieve racial equity and redress past discrimination
in the country’s educational system through reforming expenditure patterns and
reallocating funds to poorer provinces and to predominantly black schools rather
than just expanding the budget.1665 In 1998,
the government announced new funding norms for schools to further these goals.
The new procedures require education departments to direct 60 percent of their
non-personnel and non-capital recurrent expenditures towards the most deprived
40 percent of schools in their provinces. The most endowed 20 percent of schools
are to receive 5 percent of the resources, and all students are to receive a
minimum package of teaching and learning materials. The National Curriculum 2005
Framework has helped bridge the gap in educational opportunities between
privileged and under-privileged children by more equitably providing learning
support materials to all schools and standardizing the content of training
courses for teachers in all districts.1666
In 1994, the Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP) set education goals
and proceeded to fund several major education initiatives.1667 As part of the RDP, the president established the National School Building Programme in 1994
in order to address the backlog of school facility construction needs. Between
1994 and 1996, 1.3 billion rand (US$140 million) was allocated to school
building and rehabilitation, with a goal of building 10,000 new classrooms by
1999.1668 The rate of implementation has varied
from province to province. Most provinces have concentrated on providing a
physical plant for every school.1669
The Ministry of Education launched the Culture of Learning, Teaching and Service
Campaign (COLTS) in 1998 in order to develop a culture of learning, teaching
and service that improves the delivery and quality of education. Among the objectives
of the COLTS Campaign is to encourage parental participation in institutions
of learning and to create a safer learning environment. The COLTS Directorate
of the Department of Education coordinates the Campaign, which is implemented
through various projects such as the Yizo Yizo Media Campaign, Creative Arts
Initiative, and the Parental Involvement Project.1670
The National Early Childhood Development (ECD) Pilot Project was launched in
1997 to conduct research and develop systems and models to ensure children have
improved access to quality education programs. The ECD Pilot Project has
reached 2,800 nongovernmental early childhood learning sites serving
approximately 70,000 of the most disadvantaged.1671
South Africa has adopted Outcomes-Based Education (OBE) that is learner-centered
and oriented towards results and outcomes.1672
This new pedagogical approach has been developed into a curriculum framework for
learning at school level, referred to as “Curriculum 2005.” The Department of
Education launched the framework in April 1997, phased it into grade 1 in 1998
and into grade 2 in 1999. Curriculum 2005 was to be phased into grades 3-7 in
2000.1673
The government hopes to reduce the percentage of government expenditure on
education that goes to personnel costs to 85 percent by 2005, freeing up additional
funds for equipment, school supplies, and other materials.1674
A shortage of learning materials has been cited as one of the most common
problems with the current educational system.1675
From 1991 to 1996, the government increased its expenditures on education by
89 percent.1676 After 1996, government expenditures on education continued
to increase but at a much lower rate. In 1995-96, the total expenditure on education
was 33,516,495 rand, or 21.7 percent of the total government budget and
6.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).1677 The estimated total expenditure
in 1999-2000 was 46,840,692 rand , or 21.3 percent of the total
government budget and 6.6 percent of GDP.1678
5. Selected Data on Government Expenditures
The following bar chart presents selected government expenditures expressed
as a percentage of gross national product (GNP). The chart considers government
expenditures on education, the military, health care, and debt service. Where
figures are available, the portion of government spending on education that is
specifically dedicated to primary education is also shown.1679
While it is difficult to draw conclusions or discern clear correlations between
areas of government expenditure as a percentage of GNP and the incidence of
child labor in a country, this chart and the related tables presented in Appendix
B (Tables 14 through 19) offer the reader a basis for considering the relative
emphasis placed on each spending area by the governments in each of the 33 countries
profiled in the report.
1598 Statistics South Africa and South Africa Department of Labor, Child
Labor in South Africa: Survey of Activities of Young People, 1999 (Pretoria:
Statistics South Africa, 2000), 35.
1599 Ibid. at 51.
1600 Ibid. at 35.
1601 U.S. Embassy-Johannesburg, unclassified telegram no. 0655, June 21, 2000
[hereinafter unclassified telegram 000655].
1602 Ibid.
1603 Interview with Zacharia Mohanoe, assistant general secretary, and Ignatius
Simone, education coordinator, National Union of Farmworkers, July 27, 2000.
1604 Unclassified telegram 000655.
1605 Ibid.
1606 One inspection led to the discovery of children working in three coal
yards where they were packing sacks with coal, loading them on carts, and delivering
the sacks. The children were being paid on commission. See Interview
with Fatima Bhyat, director of minimum standards, South Africa Department of
Labor, by U.S. Department of Labor official (July 26, 2000) [hereinafter Bhyat
interview]. See also Charity Bhengu, “Poverty Condemns Kids to a Tough
Life,” Sowetan, April 19, 2000.
1607 “The terms ‘African’, ‘Coloured’, ‘Indian’, and ‘White’ are apartheid
classifiers. Because these racial classifications correspond so strongly with
economic and social status and poverty, they have been retained until such time
as greater equity between race groups has been achieved.” From Convention
on the Rights of the Child , Republic of South Africa, November 1997, 1
[hereinafter Convention on the Rights of the Child ].
1608 Child Labor in South Africa at 37.
1609 Ibid. at 51.
1610 Ibid.
1611 Ibid. at 37.
1612 Ibid. at 51.
1613 Unclassified telegram 000655.
1614 Charity Bhengu, “Children Forced into Prostitution,” Sowetan, March
17, 1998.
1615 ECPAT International, Looking Back, Thinking Forward: The Fourth Report
on the Implementation of the Agenda for Action Adopted at the First World Congress
Against Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, Stockholm, Sweden, August
28, 1966 (1999-2000), Section 3.4. [hereinafter Looking Back, Thinking Forward
].
1616 Ibid. See also South Africa National Council for Child and Family
Welfare, Report on the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in South
Africa, June 9, 2000, 10.
1617 Looking Back, Thinking Forward .
1618 Ibid.
1619 Ibid.
1620 Interview with E. Kenneth Andoh, director, Pretoria Area Office, ILO-IPEC,
by U.S. Department of Labor official, July 25, 2000.
1621 For a more detailed discussion on the relationship between education statistics
and work, See Chapter 1, Introduction.
1622 South Africa Department of Education, Education for All: The South
African Assessment Report (Pretoria: Department of Education, 2000), 29.
[hereinafter The South African Assessment Report ].
1623 Ibid. at 31.
1624 Ibid. at 32.
1625 Ibid. at 31.
1626 World Education Report 2000: The Right to Education: Towards Education
for All throughout Life (Geneva: UNESCO Publishing, 2000), 152.
1627 Statistics South Africa, “Child Labor in South Africa: Tables. Surveys
of Activities of Young People 1999” (draft), 2000 (www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/ipec/simpoc/southafrica/report/index.htm)
[hereinafter “Child Labor in South Africa: Tables”].
1628 Child Labor in South Africa at 64.
1629 Ibid. at 61.
1630 Ibid. at 62.
1631 Ibid. at 66.
1632 Convention on the Rights of the Child .
1633 Basic Conditions of Employment Act (Act No. 75), 1997, Government Gazette,
Republic of South Africa (Cape Town: Creda Communications for the Government
Printer, December 1997), 38, 40 [hereinafter Employment Act].
1634 Ibid.
1635 Ibid.
1636 Ibid.
1637 “Child Labor in South Africa: Tables.”
1638 Ibid.
1639 Ibid.
1640 Ibid.
1641 Implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child: South
Africa’s Supplement to the Initial Country Report (Pretoria: Office of the
President, 2000), 58-59 [hereinafter Implementation of the Convention
].
1642 “Child Labor in South Africa: Tables.” See also Implementation of the
Convention at 59.
1643 Looking Back, Thinking Forward .
1644 Employment Act at 40.
1645 As quoted in Convention on the Rights of the Child at 16.
1646 Bhyat interview.
1647 See , for instance, South Africa Department of Labor, “Integrated
Labour Inspection Checklist,” received from Department of Labor officials, August
2000.
1648 Dawie Bosch, Enforcing the Law on Child Labour in South Africa,
quotes and summary of the material and information presented for the Department
of Labor training workshop (May 24-26, 1999), 5-6, as reproduced in Network
Against Child Labor, Documents to be Discussed at the Meeting of 17 January
2000 (Johannesburg: Department of Social Services and Population Development,
2000) [hereinafter Network Against Child Labor].
1649 Bhyat interview.
1650 Unclassified telegram 000655.
1651 For a list of which countries profiled in Chapter 3 have ratified ILO
Conventions No. 138 and No. 182, see Appendix C.
1652 Implementation of the Convention at 56.
1653 Network Against Child Labor at “Background.”
1654 Ibid. at “Discussion Document in Relation to Child Labour in South Africa.”
1655 Ibid., “Submission to the Departmental Committee on Developmental Social
Services,” at 3.
1656 U.S. Social Security Administration, Social Security Programs throughout
the World, 1999 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1999),
328-29.
1657 Looking Back, Thinking Forward .
1658 Network Against Child Labor at “Background.”
1659 Interview with Suohilla Leslie, national program manager, South African
National Council for Child Welfare, July 27, 2000.
1660 Ibid.
1661 South Africa National Council for Child and Family Welfare, Report
on the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in South Africa, June
9, 2000, 4.
1662 Convention on the Rights of the Child at 84.
1663 South African Assessment Report at 10.
1664 Ibid.
1665 Ibid. at 26-27.
1666 Implementation of the Convention at 45.
1667 “Education: Achieving Equality?” Indicator South Africa: A Barometer
of Social Trends , June 17, 2000, 40 [hereinafter “Education: Achieving
Equality?”].
1668 South African Assessment Report at 19.
1669 Ibid. at 20.
1670 Ibid. at 18-19. See also Convention on the Rights of the Child
at 87.
1671 South African Assessment Report at 20-21.
1672 Ibid. at 21.
1673 Ibid.
1674 Ibid. at 33.
1675 “Education: Achieving Equality?” at 42.
1676 South African Assessment Report at 26.
1677 Ibid. at 32.
1678 Ibid.
1679 See Chapter 1, Section C, 5, for a fuller discussion of the information
presented in the box. See also Appendix B for further discussion, and
Tables 14 through 19 for figures on government expenditure over a range of years.