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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Ignition of UCT Student Protests
On February 16, 2026, the University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa's oldest and most prestigious higher education institution, witnessed the eruption of student demonstrations right on the first day of academic registration for the 2026 year. Organized primarily by the Students' Representative Council (SRC), the protests centered around long-standing grievances over financial barriers preventing academically eligible students from accessing education. What began as a planned march from Sarah Baartman Hall to the Bremner Building quickly escalated, with protesters blocking key campus entrances, including the critical M3 highway access point in Rondebosch. This disruption halted incoming traffic, delayed registrations, and drew immediate attention from campus protection services and local traffic authorities.
The core issue revolves around registration holds, commonly known as fee blocks, where students with outstanding debts exceeding R10,000—the threshold set by UCT's Council-approved financial exclusion policy—are barred from enrolling in courses. Despite UCT's proactive debt relief initiatives, these blockades symbolized deeper frustrations with systemic financial exclusion in South African higher education.
Day Two Disruptions and SRC Demands
By February 17, the protests had entered their second day, with groups of students continuing to obstruct entrances despite some reported progress in negotiations. The SRC handed over a detailed memorandum to university management, outlining urgent demands. These included the immediate suspension of all academic classes, both virtual and in-person, until every deserving student could register; the complete lifting of fee blocks for those in good academic standing; expansion of on-campus housing with a fairer allocation system; enactment of a comprehensive policy to prevent financial exclusion, as recommended by the Independent Resource to Transformation Committee (IRTC) report; and a joint management-SRC proposal to the University Council for a special meeting.
Student leaders emphasized that while some relief had been granted, it fell short of addressing the plight of self-funded students, who do not qualify for National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS, South Africa's government-funded bursary and loan program for low-income households) support. The demonstrations highlighted a rallying cry against rising tuition and accommodation costs, echoing sentiments from previous years.
Decoding Fee Blocks and Registration Holds
Registration holds, or fee blocks, are mechanisms employed by UCT and many South African universities to enforce payment of historic debts—accumulated fees from previous years. Under UCT's policy, students owing more than R10,000 face exclusion from registration, even if they have secured funding for the current year. This policy aims to maintain financial sustainability amid ballooning student debts, which across South African institutions reached nearly R8.8 billion at eight universities by late 2024.
The process works as follows: Students apply for registration online or in-person starting early February. The system checks outstanding balances against the R10,000 cap. If exceeded, a hold is placed, requiring payment plans, appeals, or relief approval before proceeding to module selection and class attendance. For NSFAS-eligible students (household income below R350,000), relief is prioritized, but self-funded or 'missing middle' students (R350,000–R600,000 income) often fall through cracks without additional bursaries.
This year, approximately 1,400 students remain blocked: around 900 postgraduates, 100 from the Graduate School of Business, and 400 undergraduates, many actively making payments but still over the threshold.
UCT's Debt Relief Efforts: Scope and Limitations
UCT has not been idle. For the 2026 academic year, the university extended fee debt relief to 2,883 students, encompassing NSFAS recipients, eligible missing middle applicants, and vulnerable students with confirmed 2026 funding. This included interim measures allowing registration for those with full or 50% funding, defunded final-year NSFAS students, and select postgraduates impacted by NSFAS accommodation caps.
Historically, UCT has invested heavily: R1.75 billion in undergraduate support in 2023 alone, sourced from NSFAS, corporate bursaries, and internal funds. In 2025, internal bursaries aided 1,300 students with debts over R10,000. Yet, challenges persist due to universities owing NSFAS R10.46 billion (2017–2023), straining resources. Self-funded students, comprising most of the remaining 1,400, urge case-by-case reviews and study loans with acknowledgements of debt.
In response to protests, UCT extended the registration deadline to February 20, providing breathing room for payments and appeals. Read UCT's official update.
Student Perspectives: Frustration and Resolve
SRC Secretary-General Takalani Makhwathana captured the mood: “It is evident from today’s demonstrations that students are tired of the rising costs of tuition and accommodation fees.” President Kitso Mojapelo highlighted systemic bias: “Self-funded students do not benefit from any relief measures.” EFF Student Command's Mahlatse Dlamini demanded: “Academically eligible students must register; all academic proceedings must be closed until they have.”
These voices represent thousands facing dropout risks, mental health strains, and deferred dreams in a country where higher education completion rates hover below 20% for disadvantaged groups. Protests, while disruptive, aim to force dialogue on equitable access.
Photo by Desola Lanre-Ologun on Unsplash
- Immediate registration for all eligible students
- Debt forgiveness or extended payment plans
- Housing guarantees without financial preconditions
- Council-level policy overhaul
University Leadership's Stance and Safeguards
Vice-Chancellor Professor Mosa Moshabela affirmed: “We prioritise support for academically eligible NSFAS-funded and financially vulnerable students... but we will take action against unlawful disruptions.” UCT upholds peaceful protest rights but enforces an interdict against blocking access, class interruptions, or property damage. Campus Protection Services monitors, requiring ID cards and prohibiting masks.
With 852 residence beds available, UCT denies an accommodation crisis. Ongoing SRC engagements promise amicable resolutions, balancing student aid with the 2026 academic project's integrity. Appeals are processed individually, urging loans for quick registration.
The National Student Debt Landscape in South Africa
UCT's turmoil mirrors a nationwide crisis. NSFAS approved 609,000 applications for 2026 but rejected 49,000, leaving many in limbo. Universities face R11.94 billion owed to NSFAS, while student debts cripple institutions like CPUT and TUT. The 'missing middle' exacerbates gaps, as NSFAS loans rollout lags.
Government interventions, like historic debt wipes, provide temporary relief but fail long-term. For context, see South Africa's higher ed capacity crunch. This underscores calls for sustainable funding models in South African higher education.
Immediate Impacts and Long-Term Ramifications
Protests delayed orientations, frustrated staff, and risked academic starts. Blocked M3 caused commuter chaos. Vulnerable students face lost semesters, perpetuating inequality—Black and low-income groups disproportionately affected.
Broader effects: eroded trust, strained resources, potential NSFAS delays. Yet, they spotlight solutions like public-private bursaries. Discover career paths at higher education jobs or South Africa opportunities via AcademicJobs South Africa.
Parallels to FeesMustFall and Evolving Activism
These events evoke #FeesMustFall (2015–2016), which secured NSFAS insourcing and fee freezes but left debts unresolved. Tactics evolved: less violence, more negotiation, yet blockades persist. Lessons include policy wins but risks of exclusion for non-protesters.
Today's focus on self-funded postgrads marks nuance, demanding inclusive relief. Related SA higher ed challenges.
Pathways to Resolution and Future Outlook
Optimism lies in extended deadlines, appeals, and dialogues. Proposed solutions:
- Expanded NSFAS loans for missing middle
- University endowment funds for debt relief
- Income-contingent repayments post-graduation
- Digital platforms for faster appeals
Government could allocate targeted budgets, while institutions partner corporates. Long-term: diversify funding beyond NSFAS. UCT's commitment signals progress, but sustained action is key.
Daily Maverick on day one events.
Photo by Faith Eselé on Unsplash
Support Resources for Students and Professionals
Affected students: Apply for UCT appeals, NSFAS reconfirmations, or bursaries. Build resumes with our free resume template. Aspiring academics, rate experiences at Rate My Professor, seek advice via higher ed career advice, or browse university jobs.
In conclusion, UCT student protests underscore urgent reforms for accessible higher education in South Africa. Stay informed, engage constructively, and pursue opportunities to thrive.
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