Johannesburg: Famed Indian-origin South African cartoonist Nanda Soobben has been asked by the country's Education Department to shut his design school, a media report said.


COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Soobben's works are included in the country's former President Nelson Mandela's private collection and held by South Africa's Smithsonian Institute.


Soobben‚ founder of the Centre for Fine Art‚ Animation and Design‚ was instructed to halt lessons after the department informed him that his accreditation to operate as a private higher education institution had been suspended for the second time within weeks, news website TimesLive reported.


Soobben has appealed against the decision and refused to stop tutoring his 20 students. An online petition was launched to save the school, according to the report.


The cartoonist said the first time his accreditation was suspended was because he could not provide the department with his student database.


"I was robbed four times and forced to move premises," he told TimesLive.


"The department suspended our accreditation because we didn't have our students' database‚ which had been stolen in the robberies‚ with all our computers. We then set up a new database‚ appealed and were reinstated," he said.


In the latest development, the school's accreditation was suspended again when they failed to provide the department with a health and safety report.


"We moved in a hurry because of the crime situation. But we got the report done and sent it within the specified time. They say the appeal is pending but we are still suspended.


"I put my own career on the block to run this school. I am just so tired and disappointed," he said.


Soobben said he was prepared to fight the matter in court.