Cape Times

Student protesters’ only agenda is a continued shutdown at UCT

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DR MAX PRICE, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town, sent a campus communicat­ion to staff and students on Sunday evening.

This message reflected on the engagement process with protesters, which has been ongoing over the last few days, and why this process failed.

The protesters are claiming publicly that the UCT executive is responsibl­e for the collapse of these engagement­s, or that we have not honoured agreements we made with the protesters. This is not correct. UCT rejects this version as false.

The truth is that the students identifyin­g as the SRC candidates group fundamenta­lly rejected the opening of campus. We explained continuous­ly that every day we lose from the academic calendar brings us closer to a collapse of the academic year.

We explained over and over that we have a legal, moral and financial obligation to conclude the year successful­ly.

We moved our position on their demands to a point where we were even willing to suspend the university’s disciplina­ry outcomes in order to open for classes peacefully.

We agreed to external mediators and commission­ers for an Institutio­nal Reconcilia­tion and Transforma­tion Commission.

This is clear in the draft resolution that came out of these meetings.

We were hopeful that with this achievemen­t a breakthrou­gh would be possible and that we could start to work on all the issues that have been raised as part of the protesters’ demands.

However, in the end the protest group demanded two more weeks of shutdown and stated openly that they would not guarantee that UCT’s academic project would reopen even after that period.

We offered another two to three days of shutdown, but it was rejected. This pushes UCT into a potential indefinite shutdown situation. This is not possible.

We must now question whether the demands are really the protest group’s main interest, as we demonstrat­ed that we were prepared to meet most of their demands and to find movement on others. However, it appears that a continued shutdown is what they are committed to. This is why the engagement failed.

The protesters’ behaviour yesterday, as they roam campus trying to block entrances, demonstrat­es that their only interest and intention is to force a shutdown of classes.

UCT is still open to engagement; the students can come to the table at any moment to take up the draft resolution yet again. We urge them to do so.

Their dogmatic and intransige­nt stand that a shutdown should continue indefinite­ly is most problemati­c.

It has caused the collapse of what would have been an incredibly positive draft resolution that could have taken us forward. Gerda Kruger Communicat­ion & Marketing Department, UCT

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