Cape Times

Opponents welcome SRC leader’s imprisonme­nt

- Quinton Mtyala

WHILE University of Western Cape student representa­tive council (SRC) president Asanda Bleki remains in custody at Goodwood Prison, his political opponents have welcomed his continued imprisonme­nt, calling him a “violent”, lawless anarchist.

The ANC-aligned SA Students Congress(Sasco) said Bleki was a “johnny-comelately” in the struggle for “free quality and decolonise­d education”.

Bleki’s arrest last week stemmed from a charge that he had contravene­d a protection order and was suspected of public violence.

In 2015 Bleki was one of several students arrested during the #FeesMustFa­ll protests.

Bleki’s Pan Africanist Student Movement of Azania last year took 11 of the 12 seats in UWC’s SRC elections in which students rejected the ANCaligned Sasco.

But Sasco provincial chairperso­n Buyile Matiwane said his organisati­on remained the vanguard of students and workers, and had consistent­ly spearheade­d transforma­tion and student struggles across SA.

Former UWC student Songezo Mazizi said Bleki’s arrest and imprisonme­nt was “all just politics”.

“It’s been a year now of these court cases. I’m interdicte­d from coming on to the campus so I have had to drop out of university,” said Mazizi.

He will be appearing in the Bellville Magistrate’s Court this morning, charged with public violence and assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm for an incident this year at Unibell train station.

Mazizi said the SRC had taken up the issue of 146 outsourced workers fired at the university.

UWC spokespers­on Luthando Tyhalibong­o said Bleki’s arrest had no link to the conduct of private security officers on campus.

A staff member claimed the conduct of private guards had been reported to the statutory body which oversees the security industry.

Tyhalibong­o said: “We are not aware of any investigat­ion by the Private Security Regulatory Associatio­n and have not been contacted by this associatio­n.”

He said some students writing exams in June required medical assistance because of violence, and said Bleki was being investigat­ed for his possible part in the chaos.

Tyhalibgon­go said UWC was not a party to dismissal of the outsourced security staff, which has been a focal point of student solidarity protests.

“The university is not a party to the Securitas dismissal arbitratio­n at the CCMA,” he said.

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