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SA's alarming child violence rates demand collaboration between government and NGOs
SA's alarming child violence rates demand collaboration between government and NGOs

Daily Maverick

time4 days ago

  • Daily Maverick

SA's alarming child violence rates demand collaboration between government and NGOs

The plan is up against dysfunction within social development departments and fraught relations with NGOs that deliver most services. About 1,100 children were murdered in South Africa in the past financial year, according to South African Police Service (SAPS) crime statistics. And estimates prepared by detective services suggest that about 1.181 children were victims of attempted murder and 6,209 were seriously assaulted in just the last three-quarters of the 2024/25 financial year. It is clear that South Africa has a serious problem of violence against children. As the country marks national Child Protection Week, those mandated to care for its children should step up. In November 2024, the first-ever Global Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence Against Children took place in Bogotá, Colombia. South Africa's Social Development Minister, Sisisi Tolashe, joined ministers from 102 other countries in pledging an ambitious plan of action to prevent and respond to violence against children. South Africa committed to several actions by 2027. One was to implement evidence-based parenting programmes in 52 districts to ensure safe home environments for children, and reduce child abuse and the use of corporal punishment by parents and caregivers. Another was to implement the 2024 Basic Education Laws Amendment Act by 2027 to improve safety in the learning environment. The law strengthens the ban on corporal punishment in schools and introduces stronger penalties for those using corporal punishment. South Africa also pledged to ensure that psychosocial services are available 24 hours a day to parents and caregivers in distress, and increase the reach of the 365 Days Child Protection Programme of Action for prevention and management of violence against children to 52 districts. It also committed to strengthening the ability of caregivers and frontline workers to reduce and prevent online violence against children. Targets Achieving these targets would help keep children safe and potentially decrease violence overall in South Africa. This is critical because violence against children carries heavy costs for individuals, families and the state. A 2015 study by Save the Children South Africa and the University of Cape Town found that violence against children cost the country R238.58-billion a year, equivalent to 6% of gross domestic product. These are the most recent figures available — and annual costs will only have increased since then. Investing in preventing and reducing violence against children is urgently needed. This would not only save costs, but help increase South Africa's school completion rate, and reduce unemployment and dependency on social grants. Making this pledge a reality is in the interests of all South Africans. It is strongly supported by the many civil society organisations the Department of Social Development would need to work with to implement the programmes the pledge outlines. And herein lies the most significant challenge. The department at a national level and in several provinces has treated non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the people they serve with a lack of respect and compassion, placing many lives at risk. The relationship between the department and civil society is mistrusting and fraught, and must change. At the same time that Tolashe was presenting her plan in Bogotá, the Gauteng Division of the High Court made a third ruling forcing the province's Social Development Department to pay NGOs that it had contracted to provide services. By that point, these NGOs had not received payment to deliver services on behalf of the state for seven months. This is not due to a lack of finances. In the same financial year (2023/4), the Gauteng provincial department underspent its budget by half a billion rand. Essentials The KwaZulu-Natal provincial department has not yet paid its NGO service providers for work done in the first quarter of 2025, leaving organisations unable to cover staff salaries or the costs of essentials, such as food for children. While departmental social workers might help deliver services promised in the pledge, most are already responding to cases of serious child abuse and neglect, and supporting cases through the courts. Without NGOs, the government probably won't be able to deliver on its pledge to prevent and reduce violence against children. There are many positive steps the department could take, including implementing the Sector Funding Policy (SFP). This outlines why services for children are a priority, and lays the basis for multi-year funding for NGOs that provide these vital services on behalf of the state. Funding certainty would help reduce the sector's insecurity and enable relations between the department and its service providers to be repaired. However, Sector Funding Policy implementation is not included in any planning documents, and there are signs that the national department is woefully under-capacitated. One indication of this is its inability to finalise memoranda of understanding with NGOs that offer the department free technical services. Since 2020/21, the national department has not received a clean audit. These examples go beyond isolated glitches. They show recurrent mismanagement, poor planning and a lack of basic operational competence across national and provincial social development departments. The minister needs to accept that the status quo is not working. Strong, capable leadership must be provided to achieve a turnaround, not least by prioritising delivery. For the state to deliver on its bold and important pledge, the minister must focus on repairing the damage caused to the relationships between her department and NGOs. She must also be held accountable for departmental failures that are being compounded daily. The department must ensure that officials deal with families holistically. Currently, it treats each family member's problem separately instead of approaching the family as a complete system. For South Africa to develop, its children must thrive — and that requires providing families with holistic, integrated services. Civil society organisations are ready to do the work required and take hands with the department to achieve the vision of a country that is safe for children. But they can no longer stand by as services to children and families are undermined by the inefficiency and ineptitude of a department that has lost its way. DM Chandré Gould, Senior Research Fellow, Justice and Violence Prevention, Institute for Security Studies (ISS); Gugu Xaba, Executive Director, Save the Children South Africa; Suzan Eriksson, Independent Consultant, Wilmi Dippenaar, Director, South African Parenting Programme Implementers Network; Monica Woodhouse, South African National Child Rights Coalition and Give a Child a Family Africa.

Police say missing persons case to find Joshlin Smith still being probed
Police say missing persons case to find Joshlin Smith still being probed

Eyewitness News

time30-05-2025

  • Eyewitness News

Police say missing persons case to find Joshlin Smith still being probed

SALDANHA BAY - Police said the missing persons case to find Joshlin Smith is still being investigated. The missing girl's mother, Kelly Smith, Jacquen Appollis, and Steveno van Rhyn were handed life sentences on Thursday for the child's disappearance. ALSO READ: - Joshlin Smith: Sentences fit the crime, says Save the Children South Africa - Resident says Saldanha Bay community won't be happy until truth about what happened to Joshlin Smith revealed - Joshlin Smith trial: NPA says protecting children is everyone's responsibility Joshlin was six years old when she went missing from her Middelpos home in Saldanha in February 2024. Western Cape Police Commissioner Thembisile Patekile said the search for Joshlin continues. Patekile said police will not rest until they find out what happened to her. Smith, Appollis, and Van Rhyn were found guilty of kidnapping and human trafficking related to her disappearance. Former accused turned State witness Lourencia Lombaard told the court that Smith sold Joshlin to a sangoma for R20,000. Speaking after sentencing was handed down in Saldanha on Thursday, Patekile said local police are still working with Interpol to locate the missing girl. "We are continuing day and night looking for Joshlin. We've been outside the country. We are with the Interpol and policing agencies around the world." Patekile thanked the community for playing a pivotal role in bringing Smith, Appollis, and Van Rhyn to book.

Investigation uncovers child exploitation in South Africa's illegal mines
Investigation uncovers child exploitation in South Africa's illegal mines

Time of India

time19-05-2025

  • Time of India

Investigation uncovers child exploitation in South Africa's illegal mines

Representative image A recent BBC investigation has uncovered disturbing accounts of the exploitation of children within South Africa's illegal mining industry, where minors trafficked from neighbouring countries are subjected to forced labour and sexual abuse by criminal groups operating in defunct gold mines. The revelations surfaced recently following a police operation launched at an illegal mine near Stilfontein in December 2023. Authorities cordoned off the site, leading to the rescue of dozens of underground miners, including 31 children. All were reportedly undocumented migrants from Mozambique. According to South Africa's Department of Social Development, 27 of the children were repatriated in November. Survivors, aid workers, and researchers describe a pattern of abuse, with children often recruited under false pretences, stripped of their documents, and left vulnerable to exploitation underground. One of the survivors, Jonathan (name changed for safety), recounted spending six months in a closed mine, where he observed minors being mistreated. 'I used to see these kids in the mine- 15 or 17 years old,' he said, quoted by BBC. 'They were taken advantage of, and it wasn't safe for them." He said some minors, desperate for survival, accepted risky conditions in exchange for basic necessities. Other witnesses, including a miner interviewed under the alias Tshepo, confirmed similar experiences, stating that younger workers were particularly vulnerable due to their lack of power and protection. According to mining researcher Makhotla Sefuli, criminal groups deliberately target children due to their perceived compliance and lower cost. 'Their passports are taken away, and once they're inside the mine, it's almost impossible to leave,' he said. Aid organisations working with the rescued children report severe trauma. Gugu Xaba, CEO of Save the Children South Africa , said that many minors were manipulated and exposed to harm over extended periods. 'They were promised jobs but faced exploitation instead,' she said. 'Some witnessed or experienced incidents that deeply affected them.' The exposure of these abuses follows the launch of Operation Vala Umgodi ('seal the hole') in December 2023, a government initiative aimed at disrupting illegal mining operations, which are estimated to cost South Africa over $3.2 billion in lost revenue annually. During the Stilfontein operation, police restricted supplies to the underground miners in an attempt to force them out. The ensuing humanitarian crisis prompted court-ordered intervention after footage showed malnourished individuals pleading for assistance, according to BBC. Despite the scale of the problem, no formal charges have yet been announced related to abuse allegations.

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