Protesters clash with private security on UCT
Student leader says protests will continue
Violent clashes erupted between student protesters and private security at the University of Cape Town (UCT) today, leaving a number of protesters injured and four arrested.
What began as a morning of disrupting campus activity escalated when protesters attempted to enter the building in which the library is situated and were met by private security armed with shields and batons.
After a verbal confrontation with the security officers, one protester smacked one of their shields with a stick. Following this, fellow protesters began hurling rubbish bins at the security and ramming the officers with a large bin. As the private security attempted to detain some of the protesters, other students hurled stones at the officers.
Video by Ashleigh Furlong.
During the confrontation, a female protesterās braids were ripped from her head, multiple protesters were pepper-sprayed and it appeared that another protesterās face was bleeding.
There was a large police presence on campus, but when the violence broke out at the library they were nowhere to be seen. They later came onto the scene and began making arrests.
Earlier in the day, GroundUp witnessed four students being arrested after their car was followed by two police cars and ordered to pull over. The four were then taken to the Rondebosch police station where they were told that the police had nothing to charge them with.
In relation to this, UCT said on Tuesday afternoonĀ that the car contained sewage canisters. UCT also stated that on Monday night āfive containers of raw sewage were found and removed from outside two UCT buildings: the School of Economics building on middle campus and the Steve Biko Studentsā Union building on upper campus.ā
The arrested students were then released. Some of them returned to the protest on campus, where a singing group of students were entering buildings and asking the staff and students inside to leave.

UCT was nearly empty, as most students are working off-campus. This is as a result of UCTās implementation of āalternative and mixed teaching modes to be determined by each faculty and department as per their specific needsā in response to the ongoing protests.
Student leader Athabile Nonxuba told a group of staff that the protests āhave been peaceful for four weeks but we canāt guarantee that it will be like that foreverā.
Another student leader and SRC candidate Sinawo Thambo said in a press briefing that students had been ābrutalisedā on campus today and that the policeās instruction earlier to the protesters that they couldnāt gather in a group, was illegal.
Thambo said that the system that the university had put in place in their attempt to complete the year was excluding students on a āmass levelā.
He said that they rejected these methods. āIt is highly likely that the supposed alternate models will be electronic, which excludes people who do not have access to the necessary resources,ā said Thambo, reading from a statement released on Sunday.
āWe will continue the shutdown and we will do so with the pain and anxiety for the dire situation of our comrades in prison. We will not be deterred. We urge the university community to continue engaging the movement and frequent discussions and events hosted by the movement,ā he said.

Student leader Simon Rakei expressed concern that the large number of arrested protesters would ānormaliseā arrests and violence. He also claimed that the police were tapping studentsā phones and that a member of the student movement had even heard a recording of their voice coming from a private security vehicle.
When asked about the methods that the protesters are using to achieve their aims, Rakei said that when protests became violent they were no longer protests, it was a riot.
āAnd again that is in direct response to either the presence of security or police. We are not the ones who say as a strategy, or tactic of protest, we are going to burn something down,ā he said.
For possibly the first time during the latest student protests, a number of protesters wore Democratic Alliance Student Organisation (DASO) t-shirts. This comes following a satirical video posted online by people claiming to be members of the DASO Black Progressive Caucus. In the video, the students express their support of the Fees Must Fall protests.

In response to this, DASO UCT released a statement saying that it ārejects in its entirety a video posted on social media by protesting students a part of the so called āProgressive Allianceā at UCT which is made up of PASMA, Bantu, 4WRD and Vanguard.ā
āThey have paraded themselves in DASO T-Shirts and have given false stances on issues we have already made clear to the student populous. We reject that there is a caucus aimed at a specific race within the DA and DASO because we are a non-racial student organization which listens to the needs of all students regardless of race,āĀ stated DASO UCT.
UCTās Communication and Marketing Department stated: āThe situation has been particularly difficult on UCT campuses today ā with reports of violence, harassment and intimidation. The executive condemns the continuing violence on campus, and would like to thank those students and staff members who are doing everything they can to support the completion of the academic project for 2016.ā

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Letters
Dear Editor
I find the quote from student leader Athabile Nonxuba that the protests āhave been peaceful for four weeks but we canāt guarantee that it will be like that foreverā entirely astonishing in light of the fact that Nonxuba was part of the group assaulting the two security guards in the clip and still which form part of the article under reply. (He has the yellow jersey wrapped around his hand)
How long are we meant to tolerate this blatant dishonesty and hypocrisy on behalf of the Fees Must Fall leadership?
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