WC BELA hearings see massive public engagement
5 March 2024
The Western Cape’s public hearings into the controversial and much-debated Basic Education Law Amendment (BELA) Bill began last week. The first four hearings have already seen the public come out in their numbers to make their voices heard, and in most cases, to reject the content of the Bill.
Last week’s hearings – held in Beaufort West, Bitou, George, and Mossel Bay – saw near-record attendance, with more than 2 000 members of the public attending the hearings last week. The Western Cape Provincial Parliament’s procedural staff have also received more than 4 000 written submissions through email, WhatsApp, and online channels thus far.
Tellingly, some of the most impassioned submissions have been from parents and educators who expressed strong opposition to the Bill. A national piece of legislation proposed by the ANC, the BELA Bill seeks to reform legal provisions around basic education in South Africa. However, the Bill does nothing to fix systemic issues such as high dropout rates and lack of educational resources, nor does it provide desperately-needed protections for victims of sexual assault in our schools.
Instead, clauses four, five, seventeen, and thirty-five of the Bill centralise power in the hands of the national minister of education. This means that decisions over language and admission policies will be taken out of the hands of parents and educators, and handed to unaccountable and unelected bureaucrats in Pretoria. The Bill also places oppressive restrictions on the ability of parents to homeschool their children should they choose to do so, and presents no workable or financially-viable way to introduce mandatory Grade R.