On a Wednesday night , I walked
into Wits University main campus in Johannesburg to show support for students
who were in the midst of a protest
against fees increments.
On the preceding
Sunday , I had travelled all the way
from some meetings with mining communities in Zvishavane and had flown in the
evening to South Africa, ready for an activist organisation’s Conference and
AGM on Mining Community issues and poverty. It was great that I was in Jorburg,
but my greatest interest was in the realisation that a few suburbs away from
our meeting and staying place, South African was beginning to burn. The
students at Wits University had risen in arms against a proposed 10,5% fee increment
on Wednesday 14 October, exactly a week before my visit. To the campus. They
were quickly followed by fellow students from the Universities of Pretoria, Rhodes, Stellenbosch
,Cape Town, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Western Cape, Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan, Fort Hare, Tshwane University of Technology and University of KwaZulu-Natal.
So on one of the conference days, I
sneaked out at night on tis Wednesday 21 October 2015, and got in touch with
fellow friend and comrade from our student activism and leadership days,
Blessing Vava, and we went to the University of the Witwatersrand. The night
was also on the day students in Cape Town stormed Parliament building and the
greatest economy in Africa was nearly brought to a revolutionary standstill.
The author with a fellow protester in the Wits University Hall |
Former student leaders, Blessing Vava (left) and Tinashe Chisaira (left) with former Wits SRC President Mcebo Dhlamini at Wits University |
Former student leaders, Blessing Vava (left) and Tinashe Chisaira (left) with former Wits University (Economic Freedom Fighters) EFF chairperson, Vuyani Pambo |
The level of organisation of the students
was admirable. Food was being served for all from a catering team that
consisted of students from various political party and student formations. The
diversity of the political t-shirts was awesome. We bumped into the student
leaders and ad chars with them, especially with former SRC President Mcebo Dhlamini,
who got suspended some months ago for
Hitler. We also saw the current ladies who lead the union and a whole
lot of other enthusiastic and purposeful students who had gathered for a
protest vigil in the Senate House, .A large banner proclaimed that the Senate
House itself had been taken over by the students and had been renamed Solomon
Mahlangu House , in remembrance of the hero of the South African liberation
struggle and member of the Umkhonto weSizwe who was hanged by the apartheid
regime in 1979 at the very tender age of 23. It was obvious as we stood in the
hall that the lives and aspirations and hopes of the students themselves were on
the firing line, like their hero Solomon Mahlangu.
The mainstream media had proclaimed
that the protests were very violent and
when I told a few people that I was never going to fly back to Zimbabwe without
giving my solidarity to the students at Wits , I was told by one that there was
no way any car would take me there because the students were stoning cars. But
I went there and no care were stoned. However it was apparent that South Africa
was burning.
Red Octobers
The Fees Must Fall Campaign,
renamed the #FeesWillFall is an idea whose time has come not just for Mzansi
but also for Zimbabwe and Southern Africa. And when it comes to Zimbabwe, the
campaign must never be limited to tuition fees , but to a myriad of other
political and economic ills, levies, regulations, utterances rates and bribe
charges. The Fees Must Fall campaigns must also be welcomed in Zambia, where on
an innocent Sunday 18th October, a hapless government forced a
nation into praying for the economy.
The Octobers I know have proved to
be more than hot months, in history and in the present times. Exactly
ninety-eight years ago, the greatest event in the 20th century history of humanity
took place in Russia in the form of the Russian revolution, the Great October Socialist
revolution. The Octobers are also the months we remember the great lives of men
and women of character like Smaora Machel (murdered on 19 October 1986), Thomas
Sankara (murdered on 15 October 1987)and Che Guevara (murdered 9 October 1967).
This
is an October where years ago, Zimbabwean students embarked on a first ever mass
action against the then young Zanu Pf government. The same October in 2015has seen
worse onslaught and naked thuggery against vendors and the destruction of poor people’s
houses. Many running battles were still being fought in the city between
vendors and the police in the days I left Harare And this is still the October ,where
the student protest I attended in South Africa has become more interesting. I saw slogans quickly
radicalising from #FeesMustFall to #ZumaMustFall and I realised that the
burning up of the systems that had been strangling the students and the entire
societies where they come from, in Mzansi and beyond, was beginning to burn up
in earnest like the coal fields of Mpumalanga.
Without giving prescriptions, I can
say my experience from the University of the Witwatersrand and from following
up on the news from the other South African universities, highlight that for a
brighter Southern Africa and our world’s future, the world needs less youths
with swag , but young men and women of character like the students who continue
to stand up for what they believe . Aluta Continua.
First published on Nehanda Radio
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