South African
Government agreed on Friday to freeze tuition fees at South Africa’s public universities, aftermath
of widening protests by students who massed into the capital, Pretoria, by the
thousands and protested outside Union Buildings, the seat of power in South Africa.
In a short
televised statement, President Jacob G. Zuma said he had
made the decision after meeting with student leaders and top university
administrators, but did not elaborate on his thinking. “Government understands
the difficulty faced by students from poor households and urges all affected to
allow the process to unfold to find long-term solutions in order to ensure
access to education by all students,” he said.
In the largest
protest organized by university students this year, thousands from campuses
across the country participated in the protest. Most students protested
peacefully. But some started fires and tore parts of a fence around the Union
Buildings, hurling rocks at riot police officers and demanding that Mr. Zuma
address them directly. The police responded by firing stun grenades and using a
water cannon to disperse the crowds, and unfurled barbed wire to prevent
protesters from moving inside.
Students
celebrated outside the Union Buildings as they learned about the tuition
freeze.
“I’m so
excited,” said Nonsikelelo Nako, 24, a student from the University of South
Africa who participated in the march. “We’ve been crying for this. Our struggle
at the end of the day became a new freedom for us.”
Ramabina
Mahapa, 23, president of the University of Cape Town’s student government, said
he and others had initially taken their demands about freezing fees to
university administrators.
“We wanted them
to put pressure on government,” said Mr. Mahapa before he was scheduled to join
a student delegation to meet Mr. Zuma. “Then we quickly realized that their
hands were tied and that in fact they were to a certain extent sympathetic
towards us. Then our efforts changed and were now directed towards government.”
However, clashes
between the police and some students continued even after Mr. Zuma made his
announcement, suggesting lingering anger at the government. The protest in the
last few days widened to include students who had not participated in previous
demonstrations.
Thando Khumalo,
25, a communications major at the University of Johannesburg, said she first
became involved on Wednesday. Ms. Khumalo said she grew angry last week as discussions
over the tuition increases were going nowhere. Her parents, who work as
teachers, have paid her fees but would struggle to put her younger brother
through college, she said.
“That’s
when I realized we’re bring robbed here,” Ms. Kkumalo said after fleeing from
the police’s stun guns
and water cannon. “That’s when I realized I needed to be part of this.
“People are struggling to pay for higher education in South Africa,” she
added. “It’s become a commodity where only the elites are able to access
something that’s able to move us from — let’s say if you come from the middle
class — move you up higher so that you can do well for your family.”
Referring to the post-apartheid nation of opportunity and equality that the
African National Congress had pledged to create, she said, “Why are we still
struggling after we were promised so much in 1994?”
Though many
South African blacks share deep dissatisfaction with the governing party, there
have been few signs so far that the student protests are drawing wide, active
support. Unions have expressed solidarity but have yet to offer assistance.
Neither have the students received support yet from the vast majority of poor
blacks who remain the A.N.C.’s backbone of support.
The A.N.C.
and the country’s two main opposition parties have tried to jump onto the
protest movement. But students firmly rejected the overtures.
After meeting
with students on Wednesday, Gwede Mantashe, the group’s secretary general,
urged party members to join the march in Pretoria on Thursday. “It should not
be seen as a march that is against the A.N.C.,” Mr. Mantashe said.
But
because the organization has nearly single-handedly shaped post-apartheid South
Africa, the march on Friday and the yearlong campus protests have amounted to
an indictment of it. The A.N.C., especially under Mr. Zuma, has come to be seen
as a corrupt political machine more interested in enriching its members than in
lifting up the poor blacks who supported it before and after apartheid.
Though the
party’s national standing remains unchallenged, its support has been declining.
Party leaders have publicly expressed fears that the A.N.C. might suffer
significant losses in next year’s elections in metropolitan areas, home to the
kind of educated, middle-class blacks that have been leaving the party.
Universities,
which say they are underfunded by the government, had proposed significant
increases. The University of the Witwatersrand, a flash point of the
demonstrations, had planned a 10.5 percent increase in tuition for next year.
In 2015, tuition at the university ranged from $2,400 to $3,500 for a full year
at the undergraduate level.
Early this week, Blade Nzimande, the minister of higher education, offered
to cap increases for 2016 at 6 percent. But students insisted on no increase.
Xoli Moloi
contributed reporting from Pretoria, South Africa.
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