It has been reported that a six-year-old
pupil called Mohau Mamaregane,
allegedly committed suicide at his
school in Seshego outside Polokwane,
South Africa on Tuesday.
According to report, the Grade 1
learner at Dorothy Langa Primary
School, was found hanging from a
noose on a recycling bag after he had asked to go the
toilet.
But when he did not return to class,
another pupil was sent to look for him.
And it was said by the school that the
fellow pupil allegedly found him with
his head inside a recycling bin after he
was then rushed to a local clinic where
he was certified dead.
But the family who feel indifferent
about the report given to them by the
school are seeking answers after
mysterious marks were discovered on
his neck.
According to the little boy’s mother, 34-
year-old Rosina Mamaregane, her son
“had bruises on his neck which
indicated that a rope had been used to
strangle him”.
While adding that he also had a swollen
cheek, bubbles were coming out of his
mouth and he had also vomited,
said;
“I want answers to what caused my
son’s death.”
With tears rolling down her face, the
distraught mother said she had received
a call from the school principal
summoning her to the local clinic where
he had taken her son.
“There is a first-aid kit at every school.
Why they did not use it on him while
summoning paramedics?” she asked.
“The principal told me to accept what
the nurses told me. I smell a rat.”
“As a family we believe he was
strangled and suffocated inside a
recycling bin on the school premises, as
evidenced by footprints we found next
to where his body was found,”
Mamaregane said.
The mother said when she went to fetch
the postmortem report, she was told it
would only be given to the police.
“I guess there is more to this than meets
the eye. The truth must come out,” she
said.
Her sister, Lekwetse Nchabeleng,
disclosing that they were still
traumatized by the incident, also said;
“I raised the boy as my own. It is
impossible that he could have
committed suicide,” said Nchabeleng
who was supported by her 75-year-old
grandfather, Bernard Mamabolo who
urged police to investigate the matter.
Lieutenant-Colonel Moatshe Ngoepe
said the circumstances behind the
incident were unknown and that
investigations would reveal the cause of
death.
“We advise members of the community,
including teachers, to put the safety of
children first on the basis that their
movements and whereabouts must be
monitored at all times to prevent these
type of incidents,” Ngoepe said.
Also speaking on the incident, the
Provincial education department
spokesman, Naledzani Rasila, who
stated that they were working with
police and the family to uncover the
truth said they had also provided
counselling to pupils and teachers at the
school.
Source: The Sowetan