Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jun 2004 Source: Star, The (South Africa) Page: 3 Copyright: Independent Newspapers 2004 Contact: http://www.thestar.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/423 Author: Dipuo Tshoagong Note: *Names have been changed TOO STONED TO TALK...OR GO TO PRIMARY SCHOOL Mpho* is 13 years old, in grade 5 and is already addicted to dagga. When children his age should be playing soccer or doing their homework, he's out buying from the dealers - who operate from a hostel right opposite his school. His friend, Jimmy* was caught in possession of dagga by one of their teachers, Lawrence Mukhari, at Shirinda Primary School in Mamelodi West, Pretoria. Mukhari said: "Jimmy had been absent for about four days before the day I found dagga on him. I had heard a rumour from the other pupils that he was using dagga. On the day, he looked high and that's when I decided to search him. To my surprise, I found dagga on him." 'He looked high and that's when I decided to search him' Jimmy then told his teacher that his friend Mpho had asked him to keep the dagga for him. Mpho admitted that he was getting the drugs from people that occupied the hostel in front of the school, even though he didn't personally go buy the drugs himself. "I had not really believed the rumours because one doesn't expect children that young to be engaging in substance abuse," said Mukhari. Drug abuse by under-age children has become a major concern for the Gauteng department of education, which has listed 49 schools around the province which it considers "hot spots" for criminal, dangerous or anti-social behaviour. Five of those schools on the lists are primary schools at which drugs are listed as a problem. Mpho's mother, who may also not be identified, is at the end of her tether. 'To my surprise, I found dagga on him' She said Mpho and his older brother Solomon*, 17, were constantly smoking dagga. Expressing her anger in Setswana, she said that they smoked so much dagga it was as if they ate it, especially the older boy. When we visited his house, Mpho was sitting with Solomon and his friend Joshua*, 16, behind a shack in the yard. When their mother called them, Solomon and Joshua were as high as kites. The mother confirmed that the two had been smoking dagga a few minutes before we arrived. "I don't know what to do with these children. At least Mpho still goes to school but was absent today because his nose was bleeding terribly. Solomon doesn't even go to school any more. He thinks he's a man and can do whatever he wishes." The mother said that she needed help because she had done all she could to get them to mend their ways. According to her, their father refused to help and said that there was nothing he could do with the boys. Solomon was so high that he could not even talk properly, let alone hold his half-smoked "zol" steadily. The mother wept as she told Saturday Star that her life was now unbearable because of her children's habits. "I have to lock up every time now, even when I go to the toilet because they steal whatever they can lay their hands on. I look at other children that go to school and wish that my children were like that. Why is God punishing me?" she said as she wept. The school's principal, Irvin Moyane, said that the hostel was a problem because it was abandoned by the Tshwane metro and was now occupied by unemployed people selling drugs to the community, even primary schoolchildren. "Our gates are always locked during school hours but we have no control over what the children do after school. The drug trafficking happens outside the school premises and after school hours," Moyane said. Station commander at the Mamelodi police station, Mokhele Seboloki, said that they were aware of the problem and were doing something about it. He said: "We are working on a programme whereby we will identify all these 'hot spot' schools and work together with the schools' managements to eliminate this problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake