SASCO NWU - Potchefstroom

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09/01/2023

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02/01/2023

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20/01/2022
South African Students CongressPotchefstroom CampusMedia Release on the RTLC13/10/2022Revolutionary GreetingsCompliments...
13/01/2022

South African Students Congress
Potchefstroom Campus
Media Release on the RTLC

13/10/2022

Revolutionary Greetings

Compliments of the new season; we hope and believe that this year will bring excellence to everyone on campus, both comrades and students.
With that in mind, we are pleased to announce the establishment of the Right to Learn Campaign as a branch (RTLC).
As a result, we encourage all students who are having problems with accommodation, registration, or academic or financial exclusions, among other things, to contact us or fill out the form below.


Regards.
Cde. Kgabo Senyatsi (Secretary)
068-070-2305

Cde. Siyabonga Mtetwa (Media Secretary)
063-715-6650

Facebook. SASCO NWU-POTCHEFSTROOM
Instagram. sasco_potch. 1

https://forms.gle/MPuHw1dPtrZ3ULaK7

02/11/2021

Greetings Comrades

Be reminded that the SCC election opens tonight at 00:05 on eFundi. Please remember to remind students to vote, this is very important ā€¼ļø

When voting, click on the photo of the candidate you want to vote for. The bullets creates confusion, so when voting, click on the photo of the candidate you want to vote for. ā€¼ļø

for democracy in education

01/06/2021

Happy Pride Month🌈

From

25/11/2020

For Immediate Release

SAUS Statement Following a Meeting with the Ministry of Higher Education, NSFAS Management and all University SRC Members.

25 November 2020

The South African Union of Students concluded a meeting with the Minister’s delegation led by the Deputy Minister of Higher Education, Science & Innovation and NSFAS Administrator.

All the Student Representative Councils from the 26 institutions were present & participated in the meeting today the 25th of November 2020 from 10:00 to 13h00 to discuss amongst other things the fee increase for the 2021 academic year, additional allowances for the extended academic year, NSFAS appeals, laptops and data etc.

The discussions in the meeting were frank and robust with positive consideration of the interests and aspirations of students to finish the academic year without being prejudiced. The union of students is the only voice of the voiceless and our role in championing the struggles of students can only be reckoned in difficult times like these wherein our students are being threatened of hunger and eviction from residences.

It is worrisome that some students will not have transport allowances to travel from their homes to campus to write examinations in December. Whilst 10 universities are finishing the academic year this year 2020, the 16 universities that are finishing next year 2021 must be given all the support to finish the academic year.

The resolutions of the meeting are as follows;

1. University SRC members should submit to SAUS a list of outstanding N+2 appeals and other NSFAS appeals that are not yet responded as of today the 25th of November 2020, so that these lists are forwarded to NSFAS immediately. The meeting resolved that all matters relating to appeals must be resolved and finalised by Friday the 27th of November 2020.

2. That the Minister will conclude consultations with NSFAS and other relevant government departments regarding students’ allowances for the extended academic year today and the Minister will address media tomorrow the 26th of November 2020 at 11am regarding this matter.

3. The laptop tender has been finalised and NSFAS will expedite the suppliers to deliver the devices to students as early as possible so that all deserving students are not prejudiced. Time-frames will be provided to student representatives accordingly.

4. Universities SRC members must provide information of universities that are not providing students with data whilst classes are continuing through remote learning. This information must reach the SAUS emails by today the 25th of November 2020. Such information will enable DHET to make an urgent and positive follow up with those institutions for intervention.

5. NSFAS will finalize before Friday the 27th of November all submissions made regarding challenges affecting students with disabilities.

6. The Minister is in consultation with university councils regarding a capped fee increase of CPI 4.7% for tuition and 6.7% for residences. A report back from councils will be shared with student representatives for further discussions. The position of SAUS is that zero percent fee increase for the 2021 academic year must be considered.

7. The DHET bursary guidelines for the 2021 academic year will not be implemented without a consultation with student leadership.

8. The Department of Higher Education will communicate with universities to ensure that Private Landlords stop evicting students until various ministerial consultations regarding allowances are finalised. This is also in consideration that the same landlords benefitted from residence allowances whilst students were staying at home during lockdown.

9. We encourage the university management of CUT, UNIVEN and CPUT to urgently resolve the matters being raised by students who are currently protesting in those institutions. SAUS is committed to ensure that national issues are resolved by DHET & NSFAS.

10. SAUS will be making an urgent follow-up on the plight of students funded by other bursaries other than NSFAS to ensure that during this extended period of the academic year all students are not left behind.

The above feedback of the meeting between the Deputy Minister, SAUS and SRCs is provided whilst we are waiting for the Minister’s address tomorrow. We encourage all students to watch the Minister’s media briefing tomorrow the 26th of November 2020 at 11am. We call upon our students to remain highly alert tomorrow afternoon just in case the pronouncements by the Minister do not positively address the challenges currently faced by students.

Issued by the South African Union of Students.

For Enquiries Contact
Secretary General
Lwandile Mtsolo
+27734405586

National Spokesperson
Thabo Shingange
+27716646858

Email: [email protected]

02/11/2020

SASCO UPDATE ON THE RECENT ELECTION RESULTS

01 November 2020

The South African Students Congress (SASCO) applauds the students who participated in the SRC elections of Buffalo City TVET College, Capricorn TVET College, University of Witwatersrand (Wits), University of Johannesburg (UJ), Rhodes University (RU), University of KwaZulu Natal (UKZN) and University of Pretoria (UP) recently held during the period from September and October season of SRC Elections.

The student movement is pleased with the number of participations during the period characterised as the ā€œnew normalā€ where both teaching and learning and election of Student Representative Council (SRC) is conducted virtually and predominantly online.

The organisation welcomes the results of all the above mentioned institutional SRC elections during the month of August and October. SASCO applauds its members, supporters and sympathizers for their consistent and persistent support in ensuring that our organisation is re-elected with yet another overwhelming victory in institutions such as the University Witwatersrand, which in our view is clear sign that we have been consistent in delivering the desired services to the general student populace at Wits University. Another defining moment has been reclaiming of Buffalo City TVET College, UJ Bunting Road Campus, UJ Soweto Campus (Burundi) and the University of KwaZulu Natal (UKZN) with 100% majority.

The landslide victory we have been registering sends a clear message to all South Africans that students see the congress student movement as their only hope in addressing the challenges that confront them at all post schooling and training institutions. These victories also demonstrate the kind of unity and cohesion the 21st NEC has built since it assumed office. We urge our structures to decisively deal with all elements that will seek to undermine the strides of the National Executive Committee to unite all students and maintain absolute hegemony within the higher education spectrum and general South African society.

SASCO is overwhelmed by the historic victory at the University of Pretoria, marking the first victory of an African woman at Tukkies as SRC President since its inception 112 years ago. We thank students from the University of Pretoria for affirming their confidence in SASCO and its allies. With this kind of historic victory at a former Afrikaner University, which remains largely untransformed, gives the progressives the opportunity to be at the forefront of advocating for our strategic perspective on transformation at key institutional forums and institutional councils. This historic moment confirms that our ideas as SASCO of building a non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous society are beginning to be dominant ideas in all sections of our society.

We applaud our structures and the whole organisation for having delivered women within strategic positions in the Student Representative Councils. This is a clear sign that our organisation remains the advanced revolutionary intelligentsia who understand that the liberation of women is a fundamental necessity for the triumph of our national democratic revolution. This is the kind of society we envisage, a society where our differences in gender and sexual orientations do not determine our superiority or inferiority. The building of this egalitarian society lies on the shoulders of each activist of SASCO.

We encourage students from the following institutions to deepen democracy and cast their vote.
1. Sol Plaatjie University (SPU) 4 November 2020
2. Durban University of Technology (DUT) 9-11 November 2020
3. North West University (NWU) 9-12 November 2020
4. Elangeni TVET College 19-20 November 2020
5. Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU) 23-24 November 2020
6. University of Zulu land (UNIZULU) 26 November 2020
7. University of Mpumalanga (UMP) 27 November 2020
8. Mangosuthu University of Technology (MUT) 1-3 December 2020
9. University of Free State (UFS) 1-4 December 2020
10. Walter Sisulu University (WSU) 10 December 2020

We call on progressive forces to come out in their numbers to support SASCO maintain absolute hegemony in all tertiary institutions.

SAVETSA

SASCO welcomes the newly elected National Executive Committee (NEC) of the South African Vocational Education & Training Students Association (SAVETSA), which has been charged with the responsibility of uniting students across the TVET sector and unapologetically championing their interests and speedily resolving their challenges. As an organisation we welcome the election of this body where we have deployed our activists to continue with the call of transforming TVET Colleges to be institutions of choice. SASCO will work hand in hand with the elected structures in ensuring that we reignite the spirit of activism within the TVET sector, bring back stability within student support services and push back the attempts to silence student activists through senseless court interdicts.

The SASCO NEC will always stand in support of all its deployees to councils and we call on all our incoming SRCs to maintain absolute discipline and respect the mandate they have been entrusted with by the organisation.

END

Issued by the South African Students Congress

Bamanye Matiwane
SASCO President

Buthanani Thobela
SASCO Secretary General

For enquiries
Luvuyo Barnes
SASCO Media & Communication Liaison
079 393 7131

06/09/2020
04/08/2020

Tuesday, 04 August 2020

*POST NWC STATEMENT: SOUTH AFRICAN STATE OF HIGHER EDUCATION – A STATE OF EMERGENCY*

INTRODUCTION

The South African Students Congress (SASCO) embarked on National visit across provinces from the 7th – 11th July, to assess the state of compliance with the national regulations as set out by government in line with the State of National Disaster as declared by the President. The intention of the visit was to ensure that as students and workers return to campuses there’s provision of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE’s), establishment of Sanitizing and Screening Stations, building of field quarantine sites for infected students and workers on campus.

The inefficiencies of the quarantine sites and PPE in this regard could be directly linked to the ongoing rampant corruption happening across the board in governance. The illicit movement of money and over pricing of PPE inclusive to awarding tenders to companies that don’t operate in this scope is a cause of concern, the corruption has hit the most vulnerable in society and this is inclusive of students in various institutions of higher learning. The corruption needs to be nipped in the butt and rooted out with pure aggression. The people deserve better governance and better services from the government they elected.

On the 22nd of July, we convened a National Working Committee (NWC) meeting to reflect on the reports from the visits and to further reflect on the state of Higher Education in South Africa both the TVET and University sector. This exercise was a necessary step to continue guiding the sector as we navigate through these times on uncertainties with lots of promises and non-delivery to us students who unfortunately find ourselves more frustrated by this imposed remote learning activities. The NWC found it necessary to reflect on the delay of delivery of Laptops, Data, Higher Education Corruption, State of NSFAS, the state of Historically Disadvantaged Institutions and TVETS.

The NWC passed its sincere condolences to all the families which have lost their loved one’s as a result of covid-19 and wished strength and speedy recovery to all those in quarantine. We appreciate the frontline workers who are at the centre of waging the fight against this novel virus.

*TVET COLLEGES*

We remain true and committed to our resolution of positioning TVET colleges as institutions of choice especially in a country where artisans are a need. The NWC reaffirmed the call for the capacitation and empowerment of the scope of College Councils to run efficient and effective institutions which must service the frustrated masses of students. On our visits both in March and now we have found dilapidated Student residences and classes where college students’ residence, we have found students locked out of their residences due to non-payment of their allowances on time. TVET’s are the most non-compliant sector when it comes to the set regulations a case in point is West College where you can access the campus without any screening, Mfolozi College residences where there’s overcrowding, Ikhala College where students are on strike due to non-payment of their allowances.

We can go on and on mentioning colleges one by one and giving their issues but we have noted that this sector has systematic problems which are as a result of negligence and greed by the Director General who wants to continue micromanaging the colleges by operating as a functionary of the colleges instead of the department, the DG Mr. Gwebs Qonde and DDG - Miss Aruna Singh have failed the students of TVETs and have failed on their mandate to have efficient and effective management systems in place to ensure that Colleges do not wait on them in order to run their day to day activities, the rampant corruption and collapse of our colleges is as a result of the snail pace of implementation of our proposals on what must be done in other for the colleges to run effectively without direct political interest by officials of DHET.

Our call for the firing of the Director General and Deputy Director General – TVET Colleges is informed amongst many reasons by:

1. Lack of adequate Infrastructure,
2. Non-delivery of PPE’s,
3. Failure to transform the TVET Sector
4. Poor teaching and learning in these institutions
5. Rampant corruption in the sector

Qonde has showed complete incompetence by failing to transform the sector to the heights it should reach, the sector is to be spearheaded by a visionary that has a perspective of that the economy dictates. His lack of vision has without a doubt displayed the inability to create individuals that should serve all sectors of the economy, centralizing the sector in and around him has without a doubt crippled its operations.

We demand:

1. Immediate payment of allowances for all students,
2. Increment of Residence allowances,
3. Immediate establishment of Quarantine on-campus sites,
4. Provision of PPEs for both students and workers,
5. A skills audit of all Lecturers and College Managers,
6. Increase of Student Support Staff and Adequate Academic support,
7. Dismissal of the Acting DDG responsible for TVETs and the Director General

We give the President and the minister seven (7) working days, failure which will see us closing all colleges within the Republic of South Africa. We are tired of the lip service and rhetoric when it comes to the transformation of our colleges because we cannot stress it enough that this is the future of this country’s skills needed by the economy.

*UNIVERSITIES*

As an organisation we have since raised the need to closely coordinate the universities from since the lockdown was imposed, we have always been of the firm view that the inequalities in this sector would manifest themselves harshly. We warned that failure to adopt a single academic calendar would exacerbate existing inequalities in the sector. We argued that the historic challenges of our universities have not been resolved and to leave university managers to abuse institutional autonomy would plunge the sector into further crisis.

Today we have universities like WSU, UFH and UNIZULU who are left behind while the historically white and advantaged institutions complete the academic year with less complications. The majority of students in these disadvantaged universities are from poor and working class backgrounds, and therefore we view these developments as developments that seek to maintain the status quo.

*ORGANISATIONAL DEVELOPMENT*

The NWC took stock of the organisational matters as it is charged with that responsibilities and shall communicate with the structures concerned, but having noted a series of public spats and unfortunate exchanges of statements in some provinces the NWC expressed itself in line with the code of conduct and the supreme document and therefore came to a conclusion to summon before the National Disciplinary Committee all those involved from those 3 provinces namely Western Cape, Limpopo, and North West.

We have noted a series of statements purported to be by the PTT of LIMPOPO appointing Regional Task Teams, The NWC has reaffirmed its decision on the terms of reference and further came to a conclusion to send 4 NEC members to the province to run regional consultations to ensure stable, inclusive and united structures. Only then there shall be RTT’s in all regions in the province.

In NORTH WEST province we have resolved to send 3 NEC members who shall run inclusive consultations with branches, so as to ensure that we unite the province as it remains engulfed by deep factional divisions which are largely not SASCO related. The NWC remains committed to its declaration of ensuring a stable and united organisation and shall not be deterred by those who have identified our institutions as sources of their income.

The WESTERN CAPE province was place under the administration of the NWC by our first NEC meeting and Cde Ngobe Lali has been working with the PEC as the NWC deployee, We have however as the NWC noted a deliberate sabotage of the operations of the organisation by the either the incumbent or those who are deemed as convocation. We will not allow SASCO to be used as a lobby tool for anyone in any structure outside the governance structures which we deploy in as the organisation.

It is in this light that the NWC took a decision to reinforce the deployment by 3 more NEC members, who will with immediate effect take over all duties of the PEC until there’s stability and calm in the province and shall report to the SGO fortnightly on progress made. The NWC has further noted the suspension of Cde Siyabonga Booysens Nqanqase and has since resolved to move the matter of his DC to the NDC for a Free and Fair process, also noting that the PEC has all officials on acting capacity.

*STUDENT-WORKER RELATIONS*

SASCO understands that the struggles of students in the country are directly linked with the broader struggles of our society and thus its historic historic mantra, ā€œwe are members of our communities before we are studentsā€ and therefore where there is injustice against working masses of our nation we shall not be silent. Frontline workers in this country constitute majority of the working population and primarily constituted of our parents who cannot afford to pay fees charged by our institutions of higher learning in our country. We will be found in front of the picket lines together with NEHAWU on the 1st to the 3rd of September defending the frontline workers in the health care system who are recklessly being endangered by our government. We will do so because we are of the strong view that the gains of our National Democratic Revolution are being reversed by those at the helm of government today.


*CONCLUSION*

We have noted the general decline and collapse of our institutions by incompetent and greedy Academics who are at the helm of our institutions who have identified our institutions of Higher Learning as Corporate Entities which must be looted after the collapse of State Owned Enteprises (SOEs), we wish to send a strong warning that *ā€œNiyabonwa, kwaye sinijongileā€*. We will jealousy guard our institutions and shall name and shame those corrupt individuals, we are fully aware that the cost of fighting corruption is high and costly, but we shall not fail.

We condemn in the strongest terms possible the attempt to silence student leaders and murder student activism by the Vice Chancellors and Administrators, we warn Prof Mthembu and Prof Rensburg that they must not dare test us. We shall not accept their heartless deeds of suspending our student leaders especially at a period which we find the country in. Our institutions of Higher Learning shall not be ran by the likes of Adolf Hi**er and M. Bison whom opt to silence anyone who speaks against the injustices.

The National Working Committee remains committed in building a united fighting force for the students of South Africa, We owe it to generations after us to handle this organisation with care as it remains the only beacon of hope for the children of the working class and poor.

*ā€œHard work is like a load placed before us, challenging us to shoulder it. Some loads are light, some heavy. Some people prefer the light to the heavy; they pick the light and shove the heavy on to others. That is not a good attitude. Some comrades are different; they leave ease and comfort to others and take the heavy loads themselves; they are the first to bear hardships the last to enjoy comforts. They are good comrades. We should all learn from their communist spirit."* Mao Tse Tung on the Chungking Negotiations" (October 17, 1945), Selected Works, Vol. IV, p. 58.




Issued by SASCO NWC

Bamanye Matiwane – President at [email protected]
Buthanani Ngwane – Secretary General at [email protected]

For Enquires:

Luvuyo Barnes
Media & Communication Liaison
079 393 7131

FB: SASCO National | T: | IG: SASCO_National | www.sasco.co.za

Address

11 Hoffman Street
Potchefstroom
2531

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