SA Coat of Arms 4.jpg

The Presidency, Pretoria, 18 March 2016

 

 

Address by President Jacob Zuma

 

at the

 

COSAS Learn Without Fear Rally

 

Orlando Stadium

 

 

Director of the Programme

President of COSAS

Members of the National Executive Committee of COSAS

Member of the ANC NEC, Mama Winnie Madikizela Mandela

All COSAS Convocants present here

Representative Councils of Learners

Leadership of the Progressive Youth Alliance

Compatriots

Comrades and friends

 

 

Receive my heartfelt greetings.

 

I am pleased to address this vibrant rally of learners under the auspices of
COSAS drawn from schools across the length and breadth of our country.

 

I took interest to come and speak to you because we firmly believe that
learners in COSAS constitute a very important layer of leadership that must
be nurtured and whose youthful energy must be directed towards the
development of our country.  

 

Programme Director,

 

This event takes place just two weeks after the voter registration weekend
conducted by the IEC in preparation for the fifth democratic local
government elections which will be held later this year. We thank all the
learners who are eligible to vote who went out in their numbers to register
to vote for the very first time this year.

 

COSAS must play a leading role in encouraging those remaining to take
advantage of the next registration weekend on the 9th and 10th of April so
that they too can play a meaning part in the strengthening of our young
democracy.

 

This rally also takes place just three days before we celebrate human rights
day which will be used to unite South Africans to fight against the scourge
of racism.

 

We will on that day remind our people that South Africa belongs to all who
live in it and that we all enjoy the same status as humans. Racism and
racial discrimination has no place in our country.   

 

Comrades,

 

Let me congratulate you on this campaign and programme, The Learn Without
Fear, which is aimed at highlighting safety issues in our schools.

 

This programme calls on all of us to work together to ensure that our
schools become insulated from any form of violence. Our schools must be
no-go areas for gangsters and hooligans.

 

On this note, we must express our concern about the small but significant
number of learners who see the need to go to school carrying weapons.  No
learner must take a weapon to school. Schools must be safe learning
environments. We have lost a few learners in schools who have been stabbed
or shot on school premises.

 

Also totally unacceptable, is the practice of bullying in schools. Bullying
negatively affects academic progress for many learners.

 

Government is employing a multipronged approach to this problem which we
believe is also psychological, mostly perpetrated by children who themselves
are victims coming from families with a deep rooted culture of violence.

 

Also important is to completely root out corporal punishment in schools.
There have been children who have been seriously injured after beatings by
teachers. This is unacceptable and must stop.

 

Let me also emphasise that efforts to rid our schools of violence and ensure
that learners learn without fear must necessarily be accompanied by efforts
against the use of alcohol and drugs in our schools.

 

The role that COSAS must play in this regard cannot be overemphasized. No
leaner must drink or abuse alcohol or use drugs even when they are not at
school, including during school holidays.

 

Any child falling within the school going age cannot by law be allowed to
drink alcohol, let alone abuse it. We equally call on all our people to
desist from sending school children to taverns and other liquor stores as
this may place children at the risk of underage consumption.

 

We also call on our law enforcement officers to improve their monitoring
capacity to ensure that those who continue the unlawful act of selling
alcohol to children face the full might of the law.

 

Police must determine hotspots for alcohol and drug abuse and execute random
search operations at our schools in order to ensure the safety of our
children.

 

Needless to say, this must be done in a manner that does not impede on the
primary function of a school which is that of teaching and learning.

 

Compatriots,

 

Connected to the question of safety in our schools is the empowerment and
protection of the girl child.

 

You, as young leaders, must therefore seize the opportunity to bring to the
fore the plight of the girl child in our communities and in our schools. In
this regard, we welcome the initiative by COSAS called the Mantombazane
Convention or the Emma Sathekge Detachment which is aimed at building
leadership qualities among girls and simultaneously dealing with a variety
of challenges faced by school girls on a daily basis.

 

This type of initiative is necessary if we are to successfully conscientize
and mobilize the whole of society to deal decisively, among other things,
with the evil tendency by some of our male teachers to prey on and harass
vulnerable young girls.

 

As leaders of learners, you also have a responsibility to instil confidence
among school girls to refuse and report to the authorities any attempt by
any adult, including teachers, to establish an unsavoury and indecent
relationship with them.

 

You must ensure that the relationship between teachers and learners mirrors
that of a parent and a child at all times.

 

You must do this with the full understanding that any other relationship
between learners and teachers which is not informed by parental love
contaminates the school environment and will inevitably erode any prospects
of meaningful teaching and learning.

 

By the same measure, this conference must discuss the troubling phenomenon
of teenage pregnancies among learners.

 

Over the years, teenage pregnancy has had dire consequences for many people,
especially women who had to drop out of school in order to raise children; a
task for which they were never ready both financially and emotionally.

 

Thus teenage pregnancy has robbed too many of our citizens of a career and a
bright future.

 

In other words, it has condemned many of our people to a life of poverty and
unemployability as well as the resultant dependence on social grants. It is
for this reason that you must work out an elaborate programme aimed at
discouraging school children from early indulgence in sexual activity.

 

I believe that you will make a great impact in this regard if you discourage
each other as peers in support of government's efforts.

 

As the old English adage goes, patience is a virtue. Abstinence and
self-discipline are the most effective ways to deal with teenage pregnancy
which has dramatically negative economic implications for the country.

 

Young people should not rush into serious relationships when they are still
too young to even understand the consequences.

 

The prevalence of HIV and Aids as well other Sexually Transmitted Diseases
and Infections among learners resulting from early indulgence in sexual
activity is thus a cause for concern for us as the ANC and government.

 

Government launched prevention and sexual health in schools programmes
recently which learners must make use of. But we still emphasise prevention
and delay.

 

You, the learners, youth and children of our country, are a precious
national resource on whose shoulders rests our future.    

 

You are the most important people in our country as you represent the
future. We want only the best for you. This is why we are spending time
today reminding you of all the matters that you need to take into account as
you build the future.

 

Our beloved founding President of democratic South Africa, Tata Madiba once
remarked that:

 

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the
world. Education is the great engine of personal development"

 

It is through education that the daughter of a peasant can become a doctor,
that the son of a mineworker can become the head of the mine; that a child
of farm workers can become the president of a great nation. It is what we
make out of what we have, not what we are given, that separates one person
from another."

 

I encourage you as leaders to lead by example and fight in the classroom in
order to guarantee a better future for yourselves and your families. We will
do everything possible to ensure that you have a conducive environment for
learning and teaching.

 

We are working hard to fix where there are challenges including scholar
transport, school infrastructure, school nutrition and all other challenges
which may hinder smooth learning and teaching.

 

We applaud COSAS for choosing these progressive campaigns. This is
leadership at its best in our schools, keep up the good work.

 

We will support you all the way as the ANC and the ANC government.

 

Say No To Teenage Pregnancy.

 

Say No To Alcohol and Drug Abuse.

 

Say Yes To School Safety.

 

Say Yes To Academic Excellence.

 

I thank you!

 

Amandla!

 

 

Issued by:

The Presidency, Pretoria

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to