
Picture: The Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Sport, Arts and Culture, Joe McGluwa
By STAFF REPORTER
6 April 2026 – The Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Sport, Arts and Culture, Joe McGluwa has expressed deep concern and disappointment at the Department of Sport, Arts and Culture’s last-minute postponement of the 2026 Autumn Athletics National School Sport Championships, calling it a clear failure of planning and accountability. McGluwa said the championships were scheduled to take place from 8–12 April 2026, at the Royal Bafokeng Stadium in Rustenburg.
“This postponement is unacceptable. It reflects a failure of basic planning and due diligence. The unavailability of the stadium was foreseeable and avoidable, yet provinces were instructed to proceed with procurement and logistical arrangements.
“As a result, provinces have already incurred significant costs for accommodation, transport, and contractual obligations; costs that now translate into financial losses and reputational damage,” he said.
McGluwa further said this breach of trust is deeply concerning. He added that communities, learners and educators have planned in good faith.
“For many young athletes, this event is the highlight of their sporting year, only to be let down by poor planning. The committee made it clear to the Athletic South Africa last week when the entity appeared before the committee, that sport is not a luxury.
“Sport is a constitutional commitment to youth development, equity, and social cohesion, and a means of living if one reaches the top echelons of professionalism. When planning collapses at this scale, it undermines the very purpose of national championships,” emphasised McGluwa.
He said the committee has demanded full accountability from the department. McGluwa said they require a clear explanation of how this lapse occurred, immediate clarity on revised dates and venue, and a concrete plan to compensate provinces for the financial strain already incurred.
“This failure goes beyond logistics. This is about respect – respect for our youth, our educators, and the communities that carry the weight of school sports in our country. We call on both the department of Sport, Arts and Culture, and the Department of Basic Education to manage national school sport with discipline, foresight.
“National school sport must be administered with professionalism, coordination and respect for provinces and stakeholders. On behalf of the committee, we wish all athletes, including private clubs participating in various sporting codes over this Easter Weekend good luck and he appealed to everyone to remain safe on the roads,” he said.