Vital that university classes resume‚ meeting concurs

02 October 2016 - 15:55 By Staff Writer

It is vital that university classes resume because if the academic year is not completed it will negatively impact admissions for next year and new graduates entering the workplace. That’s the message from university representatives and opposition parties after a meeting on Saturday night.The Democratic Alliance (DA)‚ United Democratic Movement‚ Congress of the People‚ Inkatha Freedom Party‚ and the African Christian Democratic Party held talks on the current education crisis with Professor Adam Habib (Chairperson) and CEO of Universities South Africa, Dr Ahmed Bawa‚ and the association of South African University Vice-Chancellors and Rectors‚ who spoke on behalf of the country’s Vice-Chancellors.The parties agreed that the Higher Education system is in a state of crisis. They noted that protests‚ often violent‚ have led to police and security presence on campuses‚ significant destruction of learning infrastructure‚ arson and vandalism. This has left a total of 16 universities closed‚ a further six tenuously remaining open and only four Universities fully open. “The underlying cause is that Universities have all suffered serious budget cuts over the years as State subsidies have declined. They have sought to make up for lost government revenue through increasing fees over the period‚ but this model has now reached a level of unsustainability which has caused the emergency we face‚” DA leader Mmusi Maimane said in a statement after the meeting. He added that leaving universities closed would create untold damage to students‚ to future students‚ and to the country’s future workforce.“If this year’s graduates cannot complete their courses and graduate‚ no new doctors‚ accountants‚ engineers or lawyers will enter the workforce. And if Universities remain closed‚ no matriculants will be able to enter further study next year‚” Mmusi stated. He said the parties had agreed that: • It is vital that classes resume. If the academic year is not completed it will negatively impact admissions for next year and new graduates entering the workplace• President Jacob Zuma’s slow reaction to this crisis and the Fee Commission’s delays are disappointing to say the least. At a time when leadership has been needed the President has again failed to show up. This is a failure of leadership on the part the President and his administration. • Parliament must take the necessary steps to ensure there is a budget reallocation to adequately fund universities and students. We will use the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement to make the necessary adjustments. • The state is‚ ideally‚ the right body to ensure that no poor student who obtains a University place should be turned away on financial grounds alone• However attempts by some students to achieve this end through violence‚ disruption‚ vandalism and arson deserves our strongest condemnation• It is vital that Universities be reopened as soon as humanly possible‚ and that this is the wish of the vast majority of students• The training of police and private security in the maintenance of public order policing must be reviewed to ensure they act within the parameters of the law. The right to protest peacefully must be protected‚ as must the right not to protest. “It must be stressed that Parliament has a profound role to play in the ongoing higher education crisis‚ given its ability to not only approve budgets but also to adjust budgets in order to adapt to developments of national importance. “Any long term solution must include a fundamental restructuring of the mechanisms through which University annual subsidies are determined and sustained over time. “The crisis that has gripped the country’s higher education institutions requires society as a whole to work together in order to find workable solutions for the short and long-term so that no student is excluded from completing their tertiary qualification due to their financial circumstances‚” Mmusi added.TMG Digital..

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