Cape Argus

Anger at UCT SRC’s plan to visit Israel

Palestine Solidarity Forum says student leaders are naive

- Kieran Legg STAFF REPORTER kieran.legg@inl.co.za

UCT’s PALESTINE Solidarity Forum has lashed out at the university’s Student Representa­tive Council after four leaders, including the council’s former president, accepted a “fully funded trip to Israel”.

They claimed they were told by the SRC members that they had not accepted the invitation in their capacity as SRC members.

“One cannot ignore (the fact) that they are office bearers and indeed represent both the SRC and the broader UCT student body,” said the forum in a press release.

“It would be willfully naive to assume that the invitation to visit Israel was not related to their position as student leaders and furthermor­e that the funders’ actions were not prompted by the pro-Palestine stance of last year’s SRC.”

But yesterday SRC president Ramabina Mahapa told the Cape Argus he was not in a position to comment on the trip as the SRC was set to hold a meeting at 6pm to discuss the Palestine Solidarity Forum’s press release.

The forum wrote that it was unclear at this stage if the trip was a “religious pilgrimage or a leadership conference”.

“There have been claims of both from the student leaders. We understand that for many people religious beliefs inform their worldview. However, religious beliefs can never justify the brutal oppression and dispossess­ion of Palestinia­ns at the hands of what is essentiall­y a colonial regime.

“The SRC of 2015 is bound by a memorandum supporting boycotts, divestment­s and sanctions, which was democratic­ally adopted by the SRC of 2014.

“It is unacceptab­le that members of the SRC can so blatantly disregard the decisions made by the very SRC of which they are a part.”

UCT spokeswoma­n Riana Geldenhuys said the students had been invited to Israel in their personal capacity.

The university was not involved in the invitation or the trip.

She directed further questions to the SRC.

“The University of Cape Town respects and staunchly protects the SRC’s right to independen­ce, as a body elected by the student community to represent their interests. Where they request guidance UCT gives it, but we respect their independen­ce.”

Included in the statement by the Forum were accusation­s that an SRC member had been sharing “Islamophob­ic” comments on Facebook.

UCT said if any student was found to have made disrespect­ful remarks it would investigat­e and take appropriat­e action.

The SRC was set to respond to queries today.

RELIGIOUS BELIEFS CAN NEVER JUSTIFY THE BRUTAL OPPRESSION… OF PALESTINIA­NS

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