The Star Late Edition

‘Children have been pawned’

- THAMI MAGUBANE

LEADERS are taking aim at the parents of protesting university students, accusing them of handing their children over to the state and standing by.

King Goodwill Zwelithini, while addressing thousands of people at the Umkhosi Welembe celebratio­n in Durban on Saturday, said parents needed to lead.

And SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande told SACP members attending the Moses Mabhida Memorial Lecture in Pietermari­tzburg on Friday that parents had “pawned” their children to the state.

“The parents of students in universiti­es are nowhere to be seen when their children are facing off with the managers of the universiti­es and the government,” said the king at the Umkhosi Welembe event, which celebrated 200 years since the formation of the Zulu nation and 45 years of his reign.

“The protesters are destroying the infrastruc­ture that enabled the oppressors to govern us. If we destroy it, we will never reach the level where we are able to govern ourselves,” said the king.

“Parents need to take their role; no child belongs to the government. It cannot be that the government could talk until the process is finalised and the parents are nowhere. Who do these children belong to?” he added.

Nzimande, who is also the higher education minister, said parents were failing their children and the government.

“Where are the parents when their children are marching for Nzimande? It cannot be that they hand over their children to our institutio­ns and then fold their hands when there are problems.”

The recent student anger over tuition fees has been directed at Nzimande, after he announced that universiti­es could increase fees for next year by not more than 8 percent.

Nzimande also offered a commitment that the government would pay the increase for students from poor background­s.

Nzimande said on Friday that zero-fee increases were impossible because that would impact on the quality of the work of those universiti­es.

He said the government had done a lot of work to ensure students received quality education. About 700 000 students in universiti­es would be subsidised, as would 600 000 in the former FETs.

Nzimande described the protest leaders as “hired guns for the rich and imperialis­ts”.

He said the students were failing to emulate the sacrifices of the likes of Moses Mabhida.

“Mabhida started late in school because he had to look after cattle. At times, he had to stop studying and go to work, where he earned 10 shillings a week so that he could put himself through school,” he said.

 ?? PICTURE: NQOBILE MBONAMBI ?? ‘NO STANDING BY’: King Goodwill Zwelithini, at an event at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Heritage Day, said parents needed to play a role.
PICTURE: NQOBILE MBONAMBI ‘NO STANDING BY’: King Goodwill Zwelithini, at an event at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Heritage Day, said parents needed to play a role.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa