President Jacob Zuma has reiterated that teenage mothers should be separated from their babies until they have completed their schooling, in an address in Parliament several years after he first caused outrage with the suggestion.
“They must be taken and be forced to go to school, far away,” he said in his response on Tuesday to the debate on his address to traditional leaders.
“They must be educated by government until they are empowered and they can take care of their kids, take them to Robben Island or any other island, sit there, study until they are qualified to come back and work to look after their kids.”
Zuma acknowledged that when he first expressed the view during his 2009 election campaign, it stirred controversy and was likely to do so again but said allowing teenage mothers to leave school was proving an untenable burden on society and the state’s welfare bill.
“The women protested, I want to take their kids away from them and blah, blah, blah,” he said.
“So I kept quiet, because I was saying in no way can you have young kids being mothers of other kids and young boys being fathers of kids, They know nothing of it.”
He said by forcing teenage mothers to complete school before they were reunited with their babies, society would be correcting a trend of grandparents “using what is supposed to be their pension” to raise the childen in question.
“We make you take care of your kid so that we don’t have to give a grant, and that is my view.
“So we need to take a decision about it.It is crucial in my view and I am sure if we work together we can do something.”
Zuma said the point he was making was part of nation-building but he knew it would meet with resistance.
“I am sure people are going to protest as I am talking now.”
He added: The reality is you have got kids with kids. They don’t know how to grow a child, how to look after them. They have become a burden to grandmothers, to society. So why should we just sit and look?”