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#FeesMustFall: Exam sessions at Wits at risk as students resolve to shut campus down

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 South African police forces members patrol the Wits University campus during ongoing clashes with #
South African police forces members patrol the Wits University campus during ongoing clashes with #

Students arriving at Wits University campuses on Friday to write exams will be greeted by additional security.

Wits University spokesperson Shirona Patel told News24 that university management was aware of potential protests by some students and had taken steps to ensure that those due to sit for exams would be able to do so.

The university confirms that all examinations will continue as per the examination timetable. All other university activities will also proceed as planned. The university will take appropriate action against anyone found to be violating the rights of others or contravening the university’s rules or policies. Levels of security have been increased across campuses,” she said.

The planned protest follows a mass meeting held by the newly voted-in student representative council on Thursday.

EFF Student Command head and SRC president, Orediretse Masebe, said they had information that Wits management planned to announce a 10% increase in fees. Attempts to confirm this independently were unsuccessful.

We are in possession of more information that they plan to announce this during the December holidays when we are home,” he said, adding later that they were “going to shut down the university” on Friday.

His announcement was met by a roar of excitement.

In a late night message to the SRC, university management said it was disappointed with the manner in which the student body had conducted itself after being granted a concession to hold a meeting despite the university being in a “moratorium period”.

It also warned that the SRC executive would be held responsible for any disruptions or shutdowns on the campus after it had created a platform for a non-registered student, Koketso Poho, to call for a shutdown.

The university will take appropriate action against anyone found to be violating the rights of others or contravening the rules and policies of the university,” the message read, adding that the SRC should provide leadership to contain and manage the shutdown before it spirals out of control.

On Sunday, City Press published details of the yet to be released Heher report which among other things indicated that fee-free higher education was not a possibility at this stage.

The report is sitting on President Jacob Zuma’s desk. Zuma is facing growing calls to release the report as tensions on campuses around the country grow. Protests have already rocked the University of Cape Town, Cape Peninsula University of Technology and the University of the Free State.

In previous interviews Masebe said they were not expecting anything positive to come out of the Heher report and, irrespective of what was contained in it, their mandate was to fight for “free quality decolonised higher education”.