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Heideveld Secondary School

Athlone, Cape TownSchools in Cape TownSouth African school stubs
Heiderveld learners portraying Macbeth 3 witches
Heiderveld learners portraying Macbeth 3 witches

Heideveld Secondary School is a school in Cape Town, Western Cape, in a suburb called Heideveld in South Africa. The school is considered to be a widely known school due to location next to a city main road and train tracks and also one of the first e-Learning school's in the Western Cape. The education system mostly focuses on academics providing both practical and theoretical studies. The secondary school also has clubs one can join from sports, art, musical, tech and other departments from hiking and debating. After school educational programs are present for further assistance in study's.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Heideveld Secondary School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Heideveld Secondary School
Spitskop Road,

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Wikipedia: Heideveld Secondary SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.9626 ° E 18.5605 °
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Address

Heideveld Sekondêr

Spitskop Road
7490 , Cape Town Ward 44
Western Cape, South Africa
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Heiderveld learners portraying Macbeth 3 witches
Heiderveld learners portraying Macbeth 3 witches
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Nearby Places

Joe Slovo, Cape Town
Joe Slovo, Cape Town

Joe Slovo is an informal settlement in Langa, Cape Town. Like many other informal settlements, it was named after former housing minister and anti-Apartheid activist, Joe Slovo. With over 20,000 residents, Joe Slovo is one of the largest informal settlements in South Africa.While residents have been fighting for 15 years for their right to live in Langa, the settlement recently came into prominence when it began to oppose the national pilot housing project of minister Lindiwe Sisulu called The N2 Gateway.Residents have opposed the government's request that they be forcibly removed to Delft, a new township on the outskirts of the city. After a High Court ruling by controversial Judge John Hlophe in favor of the Government, many experts in constitutional law have claimed the ruling to be unjust and against the South African Constitution.Since then, residents have appealed the decision and taken it to the South African Constitutional Court. In August 2008, about 200 Joe Slovo residents travelled by train to Johannesburg, spent the night at the Methodist Church in Braamfontein, and arrived the morning early at the Constitutional Court to protest proposed evictions. They were accompanied in solidarity by the Anti-Eviction Campaign as well as residents from Symphony Way, an informal settlement that is also in conflict with the government over the N2 Gateway Housing Project.The Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions and the Community Law Centre from the University of Cape Town, who joined the case as friends of the court, argued that the mass relocation would significantly impact residents' quality of life.During the case, Constitutional Court judges expressed their concern over Judge John Hlophe's High Court ruling. Still, judgment has been reserved.