SASCO UKZN Westville Branch

SASCO UKZN Westville Branch

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SASCO is the biggest student movement in Africa. It organizes students in institutions of higher lea

26/07/2023

SASCO westville WCW

16/03/2023

SAUS STATEMENT ON RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE SECTOR

16 March 2023

The union is pleased to announce that there has been some significant and considerable progress and development on several issues that the Union had been championing.

Albeit there are a number of challenges that plagued the sector, and whist some of them might still be pending conclusion, we are happy to report the progress and victories the union has achieved thus far.

1. Recently we reported that there had been a resolution on the 50% pass requirement. Subsequent to the appendage of the Minister’s signature to the proposal made by the union to NSFAS, we can report that all students who were wrongfully terminated and excluded, will all be funded.

2. We had recently made representations regarding the increase of student food allowances, which we’d also subsequently reported to the students and public at large. The union is pleased to announce that all students will now receive a 10% increase in allowances immediately at their next payment.

3. The Appeals Trubunal sat from Monday, it deliberated cases submitted to it. To date it has successfully processed and concluded over 20 000 appeals.
The Appeals team continues to work daily to process all appeals. Students will be receiving their outcomes on a continuous basis, concurrently with the adjudication.

4. As it pertains to the R45k cap, the union has noted the progress that has been made by NSFAS working with the union and various stakeholders to swiftly deal with the remnants of the decision to protect students from private accommodation vultures.

We further want to welcome the interventions made by various institutions such as TUT in aligning their student accommodation prices (both university and private), to the provisions of the cap.

The union called on all SRCs to submit a list of all students who have been affected by the cap and as a consequence are homeless, in order for the union to submit this to NSFAS and ensure that not one student is left stranded without a place to live and study.

The union, will again tomorrow meet with NSFAS to ensure the speedily and successful implementation and conclusion of the response and intervention strategy by NSFAS.

Issued by the South African Union of Students

President: Yandisa Ndzoyiya
Secretary General: Lukhanyo Daweti

For Media Enquiries:
SAUS National Spokesperson:
Asive Dlaniwa
0731620335

06/02/2023

SASCO would like to congratulate and wish well it’s NEC member, Cde Genius Shabalala on being duly elected as the President of SAVETSA.

We wish him and the entire NEC well, that they will champion the interests of TVET students with unwavering commitment!

Photos from SASCO National's post 25/01/2023
24/01/2023

We wish Comrade Julia strength and good health continue serving students with diligence,dedication and commitment

Aluta Continua!

03/01/2023

For immediate release
03 January 2023

SASCO WESTIVILLE BRANCH EXCECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATEMENT: On Registar's Communique

SASCO Westiville BEC welcomes all returning students and prospective students into the 2023 academic calendar.

SASCO Westiville BEC is disappointed and displeased by the Registar communique that implies registration for 2023 academic calendar for both returning students and prospective students will be full online with no physical assistant. This is the clear indication that the university does not necessarily comprehend the socio economic background of students.

EFFSC led SRC has completely failed in advocating student issues. Firstly, the pandemic of COVID-19 was the number one reason for UKZN to do online registration. Now that the pandemic is over, it is unsuitable for online registration to proceed in UKZN.
This EFFSC failure is particularly disturbing because it is depriving first entry students who are coming from poor backgrounds with no understanding of the system and technology, it is depriving returning students who have always had network issues at home to have a smooth registration period, the previous SASCO Led SRC Advocated for a 100% return of students in the first semester during registration period as they were of the understanding that the system had problems which may lead to some of our students not to register.

As SASCO Westville Branch we reiterate that the administration of UKZN Westville campus has been terrible and disgraceful. The malevonce and scorn UKZN has for its students has always been known but we never imagined that on the normal year we will not have physical/Contact registration.

SASCO Westiville Branch vehemently rejects the online registration process as agreed upon by the EFFSC together with management. We advocate that registration must be physical meaning that students must be allowed to utilize the resources available on campus to finalize their registration process.

We call on students to reject this communique by the Management, We must not allow them to gamble with out lives.

We have further been waiting for the financial concessions for the year 2023 and up until now we are clueless in terms of the agreements made by the EFFSC led SRC together with management, we haven't heard anything about the SRC Bursary and ways on how the SRC will be raising funds for our students to register.
We will not allow any of our students that registered last year in UKZN to be brutally excluded financially by the system.

*We further reject any means of increments whether registration fees increment or academical fees increments*

We must dare not be tested by the smooth, romantic relationship of the effsc and management.

*SASCO YOUR FIRST FRIEND ON CAMPUS*

Issued on behalf of SASCO Westiville Branch Excecutive Committee

28/12/2022

SASCO CHRISTMAS MESSAGE

24 December 2022

The National Executive Committee of SASCO would like to wish all its members, all students, our alliance partners and the broader society a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

The year 2022 has been a challenging year for our members, students and society as a whole, intermediated by a litany of challenges, ranging from pillaging economic conditions, sustained blackouts and soaring fuel prices.

Whilst we have convincingly overcame the worst of the pandemic, remnants thereof are still felt and the impact thereof still hampering our colleges, universities and society.

SASCO and the broader Mass Democratic Movement further suffered a torpefying loss in the year 2022, when we lost the 21st Deputy President of SASCO, Comrade Buyile Matiwane. We have however committed that the life of Cde Buyile, a life dedicated to the struggle for a prosperous South Africa and a united international community of all progressives, shall carry on to aid and guide us as our revolutionary compass.

Notwithstanding all these challenges, we must commend our members and students for arriving erenow, for it required much courage and commitment.

To those that lost their loved ones this year, we proffer our outmost and unpretentious condolences and well wishes of strength, healing and restoration.

We must also take this time to congratulate the African National Congress on a successful National Congress. We must congratulate the branches of the ANC for the character and composition of the current NEC, which resembles a sense of renewal, energy and youthfulness.

As we approach 2023, SASCO will ensure that starting off with registrations, the RTLC will be in full swing. Our members across the country are ready and committed to ensuring that children of the of the poor and working class have access to institutions of higher learning across the country.

Let us once more, wish all our members, all students and their families a Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year.

Issued by SASCO 22nd NEC;

President : Vezinhlanhla Simelane
083 586 5934

Secretary General : Alungile Kamtshe
072 841 8607

27/11/2022

Declaration of the 22nd National Congress of SASCO

“Towards rebuilding the student’s hegemony for the realisation of free Quality & Compulsory Education”

Wednesday, 23 November 2022

We the 705 delegates to the 22nd Congress of South African Students Congress, gathered at Gauteng, The Lakes Hotel from the 17th to 20th of November 2022, graced by the presence and participation of 23 convocants, SWAYOCO,SASU,COSAS leadership and DHET officials . We convened under the theme “towards rebuilding the student’s hegemony for the realisation of free Quality & Compulsory Education” in Celebrating 31 years of SASCO.

The convergence of members of the student movement from across the length and breadth of South Africa, was not only reminder of where we are coming from as the gigantic student movement, but a renewal of our commitment and contract to the seemingly indissoluble struggle of students, in particular those from the poor and working class.

A truculent duty on this congress was to interrogate how far we’ve come, the strides which we have made in tandem to the challenges we’ve endured as an organisation but also the broader student movement.
We therefore have a responsibility of repositioning SASCO as a student’s movement of choice and a leader of the Progressive Youth Alliance in institutions of higher learning.

Congress took note of the political instability within the Mass Democratic Movement, As part of our analysis, this congress of SASCO, the student movement of Claude Qavane, Wanga Sigila, Xola Nene, Bathandwa Ndondo, Simphiwe Zuma, Babalwa Ndabeni, Buyile Matiwane has identified factionalism, money politics, disunity as some of the weaknesses of the student movement. This congress declared an anti-thesis of the above.

Therefore Congress declared that SASCO must prioritise organisational renewal. We are of the view that organisational renewal will prove to be the bedrock for the sustainable development of SASCO as organization.

This renewal will focus among other things, cadre development. We note the decline in quality of membership and that has had a huge contribution on the state of the organisation, we have resolved that this is one of key areas we will be focusing on working with branches of SASCO across the country.

It is the view of this congress, that, if we are truly serious about organisational renewal and unity, we must be protective and jealous of SASCO so it can remain the beacon of hope for students in institutions of higher learning.

The congress has also noted the declining electoral performance in the recent SRC elections, our leadership across all structures must work with membership in ensuring that we turn this around.

SRCs are a critical tool to influencing the policy positions of institutions of higher learning so as to advocate for the children of the poor and working class. The Congress noted that the loss of SASCO in these SRC elections will prove an impediment towards the advancement and advocating for free Quality & Compulsory Education and building the kind of society we have envisaged.

The Congress expressed its disapproval towards the shortcomings that are associated with online voting system. We note that the service rendered to host online elections is outsourced to companies whose primary interests is monetary gains rather than improvements that will ensure transparent and credible elections. As congress we resolve on taking institutions to task by seeking abolishment of the online voting system in favor of a manual voting system in order to strengthen students participation in the election processes and ensuring accountability. Therefore, Congress declared that branches must look at their experiences and what should be a SASCO approach to this effect, the office of the SGO will spearhead branch consultation on this.

The congress also took note of the grave social ills currently plaguing our institutions of higher learning and country. We are of the view that these ills need all progressives within institutions to be at the centre stage of socio-economic transformation. This congress declared Gender Based Violence and Femicide as a pandemic.

This congress also condemned r**e culture and femicide in institutions of higher learning. To this effect the congress has declared to endow the responsibility of being a pioneer and a yardstick in the struggle to combat GBVF and all related crimes to all members of SASCO. The organisation will be leading all its leaders and members towards reviewing and strengthening the legislative front of this struggle, this will encompass but not limited to the respective GBV policies of all institutions of higher learning.

We further affirmed our stance that the ANC needs to fight against unemployment of young people particularly graduates. As an organisation we always remember that our program to transform our society will be advanced primarily towards and through organising and mobilising students

This congress declared that there lies no difference between students, and that albeit their study environments and institutions aren’t homogenous, the prevalent socioeconomic conditions they’re confronted with are the same, and therefore there should be no different allocation of resources between TVET and Universities.

The congress also resolved that students from both TVET and Universities must unite and stand their ground because they have nothing to lose but their chains as Karl Marx, once clearly alluded.

The congress took note that in line with SASCO’s imperatives towards the transformation of institutions of higher learning and building progressive societies in favour of the working class, we must note the critical shifts in the sector. In noting these changes, we must interrogate what do they mean for the current conjecture in which we currently find ourselves and subsequently for our day to day programme.

The call and need to transform the Sector through the struggles that would be waged by SASCO as envisaged in our Strategic Perspective on Transformation, were informed by the prevalent conditions within the sector, which when identified members of SASCO said they had “noted the elitist education
discourse that is unfolding throughout our campuses.”

The document goes on to reflect and commission a debate on the restructuring of the sector, a sector which at the time was accessible to less than 10% of the black majority, who in the main are the poor and working class majority.

The Congress reflected that in 2018, former president Zuma, in what was a monumental milestone in SASCO’s historic struggle for Free Education, gained us one of the most significant ground advantages towards attaining total free education in our lifetime. This was a critical point in the life of the struggle for free education and the broader student movement, so critical that what was an appalling less than 10% possibility of access to higher education for the poor and working class, was now contrasted by more than 90% of households in South Africa who would now qualify under the revised household cap.
This critical milestone meant that the face and character of the student in our universities and colleges would now change, it meant that these once ivory towers that were not so long ago only accessible to the children of the ruling class and petite bourgeoisies, were now open to the poor working class majority, who in the main are black. This obviously was not without the inherent systematic predispositions which are antagonistic to that access and the subsequent success of these students.

But on this structural change alone, it beckoning us to revise and review our strategies and tactics towards the transformation of the sector. In our Strategic perspective, we must resolve not to miss an opportunity to achieve the restructuring we envisaged as back as the 4th congress of SASCO in 1995.

Whilst we justifiably gloried in the opening of doors to learning as per the freedom charter, Congress noted that there are subsequent structural impediments that still undermined this broad access. Long prior to COVID 19, it had become abundantly illuminated that, the classroom had been becoming increasingly digitalized, and that access to data and laptops wasn’t a luxury but a necessity which, without there were no probable expectations of success for the student of the poor and working class.

Recently the minister published a draft policy on the restructuring of the sector, the Congress deliberated on the impact of this on SASCO, the broader student movement and the attainment of a National Democratic Society as per our minimum programme with the ANC and broader Mass Democratic Movement.

The Congress further noted the MTT report on the revised funding policy of higher education, and the subsequent impact this will have on the structure of the sector and the livelihoods of the working class. Amongst some of the recommendations of the report is a government loan guaranteed system.

Congress therefore declared that we must ensure that within this we don’t further yoke the working class with the capitalist chains of lifetime repayments of study loans.

The sum and total of these observations, summons us to catechize what does this mean for the sector and SASCO as it pertains to the following:

• Access (impact)
• GBVF
• Responsiveness of the sector to the prevailing Socioeconomic conditions
• Role of institutions in the social project

Congress declared to review its policy and tactical positions as it pertains to the abovementioned issues. This review will be done by and through structures of SASCO.
Upon a the conclusion of this process, Congress resolved that SASCO will embark on a nationwide campaign through its structures to equip all its leaders and members on their role in advancing the struggle in line with these identified challenges.

The Congress further endorsed the launch of the Buyile Matiwane Foundation which as set up by the family and comrades of the late 21st Deputy President of SASCO, Cde Buyile Matiwane in his memory and honour. Having dedicated the majority of his adult life to the advancement of SASCO and its ideals, Congress committed to supporting the work of the foundation in immortalising the ideas of the late Deputy President as shaped by that of SASCO

Empowered and granted by the constitution of SASCO and within the confines of renewing and reviving the organisation, congress elected the following comrades into the National Executive Committee:

1. Cde Vezinhlanhla Simelane - President
2. Cde Julia Mtsweni - Deputy President
3. Cde Alungile Kamtshe - Secretary General
4. Cde Asive Dlanjwa - Deputy Secretary General
5. Cde Thabile Dlamini - Treasurer General
6. Cde Zandile Tshabalala
7. Cde Mbalizonke Magubane
8. Cde Njabulo Mbatha
9. Cde Landy Ndlovu
10. Cde Daniel Lediga
11. Cde Sinazo Hafula
12. Cde Sanele Nxili
13. Cde Genius Shabalala
14. Cde Pamela Chacha
15. Cde Lakie Mokoena
16. Cde Nontsindiso Mbutho
17. Cde Mangaliso Nompula
18. Cde Lungelo Nonjikelo

END.

Issued by SASCO 22nd NEC

Vezinhlanhla Simelane
President
0835865934

Alungile Kamtshe
Secretary General
0728418607

20/11/2020

ATT. Westville Students
Please take note of the following contact details of your CRC 2020/21.

WCRC Chairperson
Kwandokuhle Ndlovu
071 0045867
[email protected]
WCRC Secretary
Andile Xulu
067 221 4775
[email protected]
WCRC Finance Officer
Aphiwe Madinga
084 023 0344
[email protected]
WCRC Student Services Officer
Nduduzo Siyabonga Zulu
076 673 0986
[email protected]
WCRC Residence Affairs Officer
Samantha Kaylie-Sibiya
071 113 2412
[email protected]
COLLEGE REP: Health Sciences
Thammie Mncube
062 409 7547
[email protected]
COLLEGE REP: Law and Management Sciences
Bonga KaNtuthuko Mhlongo
081 048 8201
[email protected]
COLLEGE REP: Agriculture, Engineering & Science
Sandiswa Banele Mtakwende
084 261 5304
[email protected]
BAZONISEBENZELA, BASEBENZISENI !! UTILISE THEM AT YOUR OWN DISPOSAL!!!
❤🖤💚💛✊

07/10/2020

🖤💚💛❤️ SASCO🖤💚💛❤️

Photos from SASCO KZN Province's post 24/09/2020
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