VIDEO: UKZN students threaten to intensify protests

The student protests have led to the University of KwaZulu-Natal to suspend its academic programme indefinitely. .

“We will intensify the strike.”

That was the word from Mphathi Majola, Chairperson of the Student Representative Council at UKZN, after a meeting with university management on Tuesday.

Following two weeks of student protests at UKZN, the university has suspended its academic program indefinitely to meet with student leadership on Tuesday and discuss a way forward.

ALSO READ: UKZN suspends academic programme on all campuses

The university resolved to extend the registration period to 6 March.

“In relation to other issues, including the 15 per cent payment of historic debt and other issues affecting students, there was no movement from the side of the management and they are maintaining that they will impose the 15 per cent,” said Majola.

Central to the student protests has been the university’s policy requiring students to pay 15 per cent of their historical debt before they are cleared to register.

In a separate incident, hundreds of students marched from Howard College to the City Hall in Durban on Tuesday afternoon.

The students were calling for eThekwini Municipality to intervene. The students were momentarily stopped by police when they reached Curries Fountain, who advised them the march was illegal.

ALSO READ:  Students torch building on UKZN Howard College campus

After waiting  a couple of hours, student leadership allegedly called city management and were given permission to proceed with the march.

Addressing students at the city hall, Kuhlekonke Ntuli, former Howard Campus SRC President, said students were striking because they want to study.

“UKZN is not a business but a school for higher education and training of students and we should all remember why we registered” she said. “We are here because UKZN does not respect the right to education.

Ntuli handed over a memorandum of demands to an official from the municipality.

Among the 5-page memo was a call for the university to allow all students with a combined income of R350 000 – R600 00 (middle income) to register without paying the 15 percent debt owed.

The academic programme remains suspended at UKZN.

 

Do you want to receive news alerts via Telegram? Send us a message (not an sms) with your name and surname to 060 532 5535.

You can also join the conversation on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.

PLEASE NOTE: If you have signed up for our news alerts you need to save the Berea Mail Telegram number as a contact to your phone, otherwise you will not receive our alerts

Here’s where you can download Telegram on Android or Apple.

Exit mobile version