Dreadlocks allowed in Malawi schools
Pupils with dreadlocks can now attend public schools in Malawi. The High Court in the eastern city of Zomba ordered that these pupils be admitted into school after a petition was brought by two Rastafarian children, who were refused admission to public schools in 2016 and 2010. Members of the Rastafarian community in Malawi have welcomed the court’s decision. However, they now want reparation for members who were denied the right to get an education. Ezaius Mkandawire is a Rastafarian elder of the Nayabingi Order in Lilongwe. He told BBC's Peter Jegwa why schools didn't allow children with dreadlocks in school.
(Picture: Ezaius Mkandawire, a Rastafarian elder of the Nayabingi Order in Lilongwe. Credit: BBC)
Duration:
This clip is from
More clips from Focus on Africa
![]()
African 'Mean Girls' play debuts in London
Duration: 04:18
![]()
Protecting Uganda’s gorillas
Duration: 09:24
![]()
Alessandro de' Medici: The Black Prince of Florence
Duration: 03:27
![]()
Uganda LGBTQ law threatens HIV/AIDS progress
Duration: 04:18





