Over 10 000 people attended a march in Cape Town on Sunday to
appeal to the department of education to build libraries in all
schools in the country, said the campaign organiser, Equal
Education.
Spokeswoman, Yoliswa Dwane, said only eight percent of public
schools in the country had fully functional libraries.
The group, which included Congress of South African Trade Unions
(Cosatu) general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi and Nobel Prize winner
Nobel Prize winning author, Wole Soyinka and Cheryl Carolus
delivered a memorandum.
The memorandum signed by 50 000 people was handed over to
director general of basic education, Bobby Soobrayan.
Vavi pledged Cosatu's full support for the campaign, encouraged
teachers to support it and to play a greater role in improving the
education system.
He also encouraged students to be disciplined, to arrive at
school on time and do their homework.
Phathiswa Shushwana, a grade 10 pupil at Luhlaza High School
and a member of Equal Education, said education was a basic right
and that poor areas were in desperate need of libraries, as
learners in these areas did not have books at home.
?Today, the majority of children in South Africa are not able to
read, write and count adequately, and this is mainly because of
poor quality education and unequal access to resources in [the]
South African education," said Dwane.
"Unless, inequalities are addressed in this education system it
will not transform our society and it will continue crippling and
killing softly those who attend working class schools.?