JUBA – South Sudan has issued an order regulating dues charged by private schools.
According to the country’s education ministry, schools will not charge more than 80,000 South Sudanese Pounds (about Ugx2,214,000 per year) from day students.
The directive also mandates boarding schools to charge not more than 200,000 Pounds, equivalent to Ugx5,526,000 per year.
Some schools in South Sudan charge as much as $5,000 (about Ugx18,000,000) or more a year, in a country whose average income is $1,120 (about Ugx4,320,000.)
82% of the population is considered poor.
“The Ministry of General Education and Instruction has received abundant complaints from parents across the country, reporting that some private schools were charging very high school fees,” reporters quote South Sudan’s Deputy Minister Martin Tako Moyi as saying.
He warned that action would be taken against schools found to be contravening the new directives.
The order also stops schools from charging extra fees for materials such as books.
Public education infrastructure is virtually non-existent in South Sudan, a gap that has been exploited by private educators.
Schools across South Sudan reopened on May 3 after more than 15 months of closure due to Covid-19 restrictions.
Before the pandemic, 2.8 million children were out of school due to poverty, inequalities, cultural beliefs and nomadic lifestyles, according to UNICEF.
UNICEF fears that many children are likely to fail in resuming their studies.
International schools and or teaching institutions affiliated with diplomatic missions are not affected by the latest directive, according to the ministry.
The World Bank says conflict and economic mismanagement has worsened poverty in South Sudan.