Mail & Guardian

‘Blame the universiti­es, not the ANC’

- Qaanitah Hunter & Bongani Nkosi

ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe has lambasted vice-chancellor­s of universiti­es for ineffectiv­ely dealing with the widespread #FeesMustFa­ll protests.

Mantashe said blame shouldn’t be shifted from universiti­es to the government and the ruling party, because universiti­es take unilateral decisions when it comes to fee increments.

“University councils and vice-chancellor­s abuse this autonomy to commercial­ise education and exclude students on the basis of price and race,” he said.

He was addressing reporters at Luthuli House while students from the universiti­es of the Witwatersr­and and Johannesbu­rg were planning to occupy the ANC’s headquarte­rs.

Mantashe said universiti­es take unilateral decisions that are not dictated by the minister of higher education or the government. “If those decisions boomerang, they should not shift blame to anyone else. They should take responsibi­lity,” he said.

Mantashe said t he blame for the fees crisis has been misplaced. “U n i v e r s i t y ma n a g e - ment must not be arrogant in dealing with the grievances of the students,” he said.

He criticised the force used by police against students outside Parliament on Wednesday.

“Where the police act with brute f orce against students, they must be condemned and those responsibl­e must be held to account,” he said.

Mantashe further warned students not to allow their legitimate struggles to be overtaken by anarchists. He said once there is violence, the students’ struggles would be dwarfed.

The #FeesMustFa­ll protests began almost a fortnight ago at Wits and have spread to almost all of South Africa’s university campuses.

While protests have been mostly peaceful, police have been accused of being heavyhande­d in dealing with students.

On Thursday the University of Johannesb u r g a n d Wi t s s t u - dents marched from Braamfonte­in across the Nelson Mandela Bridge to the ANC’s offices, Luthuli House, to intensify their protest. They handed over a memorandum to the ANC, demanding that the party ensures universiti­es do not increase fees next year, and that the government implement free university education.

Meanwhile, most of the country’s 26 universiti­es were closed on Thursday. Many hope to reopen next week.

Wits spokespers­on Shirona Patel announced the university man- agement’s decision to close until Monday October 26.

“In order to ensure the safety and security of our staff and students, the executive management has decided to suspend all university activities for the remainder of this week,” she said on Tuesday.

“This applies to all staff — academic, profession­al, support and administra­tive — and students.

“The university encourages students to use this time productive­ly to prepare for their examinatio­ns.”

Wits has been closed since last Wednesday, when the protest broke out. Patel said management had been suspending university “activities on a day-by-day basis as developmen­ts unfolded around the ongoing student protest”.

Students are enraged by the deci- sion of the council, the institutio­n’s highest governing structure, to hike fees by 10.5% next year and to increase the upfront registrati­on fee to just under R10 000.

The institutio­n’s protesting students demand no fee increases for next year, saying they are already paying exorbitant fees. The increases will exclude many students next year, they argue.

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