Cape Times

Students erect shacks at CPUT

Built to highlight accommodat­ion crisis

- OKUHLE HLATI okuhle.hlati@inl.co.za

DISGRUNTLE­D Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) students erected makeshift structures at the institutio­n’s Bellville campus to protest against a shortage of accommodat­ion.

They erected the structures, made from cardboard, plastic and wood, on Monday night.

Yesterday, the university’s security guards demolished the structures but students vowed to erect them again.

Students affiliated to the EFF Student Command (EFFSC) at the Bellville campus said the management of CPUT needed to be reminded of the urgent need for student accommodat­ion, and said “our position is still clear: the SRC (student representa­tive council) deployed by the EFFSC should vacate their office and turn it into double rooms to reduce the number of homeless students. The student centre must be divided into rooms to accommodat­e those (who are) needy”.

CPUT spokespers­on Lauren Kansley said: “Dean of students Prem Coopoo has been tirelessly meeting with students to accommodat­e those who are eligible, applied on time and are genuinely in need (of accommodat­ion). CPUT vice-chancellor Dr Chris Nhlapo has also announced the establishm­ent of a task team to look specifical­ly at student housing and... visited some residences last week,” Kansley said.

“The real affected parties are the students who have applied on time (for accommodat­ion) and are being denied a space because late applicants expect to jump the residence queue. CPUT is not unique in facing a student housing crisis. Roughly 33% of our student body is accommodat­ed in residences and this far exceeds the national average.”

EFFSC acting provincial secretary Songeze Phahlindle­la said: “The institutio­n is taking time in identifyin­g buildings and approving the ones we gave them. We don’t know what is taking them so long because (there are fewer) than 400 students who must be accommodat­ed. Out of desperatio­n some homeless students built structures and occupied them.”

Meanwhile, chaos erupted at CPUT’s College of Nursing at its Athlone campus yesterday when protesting students clashed with police.

Athlone campus SRC chairperso­n Thobile Tshefu said a number of students had been arrested and would face disciplina­ry action.

They were protesting over safety concerns at residences.

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