Cape Times

Study clearance a victory for former MK man

- Louise Flanagan

PRETORIA: A retired military veteran who never finished school won a court order yesterday obliging the University of Limpopo to process his applicatio­n to study law.

The order requires the university’s academic registrar to accept the applicatio­n Phillip Dhlamini submitted a year ago to be admitted as a student for an LLB degree.

The university was ordered to process the applicatio­n as one for conditiona­l exemption in terms of the national rules. This means considerin­g his onthe-job learning, and not just school qualificat­ions.

This should all be done in time for Dhlamini to be able to register as a law student next year, if his applicatio­n is successful.

Dhlamini, 63, may apply to study despite having completed only Standard 6 (Grade 8).

It’s not a guarantee that the university will accept him, but it’s a guarantee that the institutio­n will finally process his applicatio­n to study.

The agreement was made out of court, but made an order of the court.

Judge Francis Legodi added a costs order, ruling that each party would pay their own costs. Dhlamini had told the court he would pay his own costs, while the university had wanted him to pay its costs.

Dhlamini drew up his own legal papers and represente­d himself in court. “It was worth it,” he said.

The university had rejected his initial applicatio­n, failing to consider it as coming from an applicant without a matric, which involves a different process. Dhlamini had submitted a further applicatio­n, but couldn’t get the university to process that.

“Somewhere along the way, there is something that they did not do properly,” said Judge Legodi.

For Dhlamini, it is more than just a personal victory. It is about getting universiti­es to acknowledg­e that former military veterans often didn’t finish school before involvemen­t in the pre-1994 Struggle.

“We are not all integrated into the current security forces, and even now, often have no options.

“It tells our military people who are no longer in the mili-

It’s about getting universiti­es to acknowledg­e involvemen­t in the Struggle

tary that they can be integrated properly,” he said. “We have too many military people roaming the streets with knowledge that can be used by third parties. We can’t expect them to do things without education.”

Dhlamini said there were thousands of former members of the ANC’s armed wing Umkhonto we Sizwe, the PAC’s Azanian People’s Liberation Army (Apla) and the informal township self-protection units and self-defence units who lived without hope or a future.

“There are thousands of them, angry wherever they are, and we don’t know what they are doing,” he said.

Dhlamini is a former unionist and an Apla veteran who was integrated into the SANDF, where he was a labour adviser.

He particular­ly wants to study at the University of Limpopo as he regards it as his political home.

“I started recruiting there during the liberation Struggle. The university created a strong background for Apla, so we called it the people’s university,” he said, adding the university should have been leading the way in enabling former veterans to study.

Applicatio­ns to the University of Limpopo for next year close on September 29.

 ?? Picture: PHILL MAGAKOE ?? FUTURE LAWYER: Retired SANDF Colonel Phillip Dhlamini, 63, outside the high court in Pretoria, where he challenged the University of Limpopo to demand the right to register and study for a law degree. The university turned him down because he didn’t finish school more than 40 years ago.
Picture: PHILL MAGAKOE FUTURE LAWYER: Retired SANDF Colonel Phillip Dhlamini, 63, outside the high court in Pretoria, where he challenged the University of Limpopo to demand the right to register and study for a law degree. The university turned him down because he didn’t finish school more than 40 years ago.

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