http://www.newsweek.com/south-africa-racist-hair-rules-suspended-after-pretoria-girls-high-protest-494514
South African students at Pretoria High School for Girls will be allowed to adopt whichever hairstyle they prefer after the provincial education minister ordered allegedly racist rules at the school to be suspended.
Female students at the school in South Africa’s capital protested on Monday after black students were reportedly told to straighten their hair and not adopt an afro style.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, Gauteng Department of Education stated that during a visit by Panyaza Lesufi, the province’s education minister, it had learned of allegations of racist abuse of black students on the basis of their hair and their speaking in African languages.
“The learners feel that educators use abusive and demeaning language when they address them regarding their hairstyles. For instance, some educators tell them they look like monkeys, or have nests on their heads,” said the department. The statement added that use of African languages on school premises “is not tolerated,” yet the use of Afrikaans—which is closely associated with the apartheid regime of racial segregation—is permitted.
As a result, the department ordered that a formal, independent investigation into alleged racism at the school be carried out and that the school’s Code of Conduct be reviewed, with the clause concerning hairstyles suspended. The Code of Conduct does not specifically proscribe Afro hairstyles, but provides detailed provisions on the length of hair permissible, and students complained that this is interpreted arbitrarily by school authorities.
Pretoria High School for Girls was founded in 1902 and was a whites-only facility during the apartheid era, which ended in 1994. It is now a multi-racial school, according to its website.