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The Outbreak of Protests at Nelson Mandela University
As the 2026 academic year kicked off at Nelson Mandela University (NMU) in Gqeberha, Eastern Cape, what should have been a time of new beginnings quickly descended into chaos. Hundreds of students took to the streets, blocking key entrances to both the North and South campuses with burning tyres and makeshift barricades. The Nelson Mandela University protests, centered on longstanding grievances over registration delays, National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) funding shortfalls, and a crippling accommodation crisis, have disrupted academic activities and drawn national attention to the turmoil in South African higher education.
These events echo a pattern seen across South African universities at the start of each year, where systemic challenges collide with high student expectations. NMU, serving approximately 33,000 students, exemplifies the strain on public higher education institutions in the country. Protesters, including members of the Democratic Alliance Student Organisation (DASO)-led Student Representative Council (SRC), South African Students Congress (SASCO), and Economic Freedom Fighters Youth Command (EFFYC), argue that university management has failed to address their plight despite repeated warnings.
The unrest highlights deeper issues in South Africa's post-school education sector, where access to quality higher education remains uneven, particularly for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. This article delves into the causes, events, responses, and potential paths forward for resolving the Gqeberha university turmoil.
Chronology of Events: From Blockades to Clashes
The timeline of the NMU protests unfolded rapidly, underscoring the pent-up frustrations among students. On February 12, 2026, around 30 students initiated blockades at campus entrances, using tyres set alight and debris to prevent access for staff and other learners. This action led to the immediate suspension of classes across both campuses, marking the first day of significant disruption.
- February 12: Protests begin with road blockages; university suspends academic activities amid reports of intimidation.
- February 13: Demonstrations intensify; NMU secures an urgent High Court interdict prohibiting barricades and protests within 200 meters of campus premises.
81 - February 14: Clashes erupt as students hurl stones at private security, who respond with rubber bullets, injuring several protesters. Police join to enforce order.
- February 15: DASO-SRC issues a statement vowing no resumption of classes until demands are met; protests enter third day with ongoing standoffs.
50 - February 16: Court order remains in effect; docket issues arise in public violence charges against a postgraduate student, signaling legal complexities.
This sequence not only halted the academic calendar but also transformed campuses into contested zones, far from their intended role as hubs of learning and innovation.
Core Student Demands: Accommodation, Funding, and Access
At the heart of the Nelson Mandela University protests are three intertwined demands: immediate solutions to the accommodation crisis, resolution of NSFAS funding delays, and extensions to the registration period. Students, many first-years from rural Quintile 1-3 schools, face exclusion due to financial clearance hurdles and online registration glitches.
Accommodation shortages are acute—NMU boasts just 5,340 on-campus beds for 33,000 students, with only 161 available for unfunded qualifiers, leaving over 1,000 registered students homeless. NSFAS, the government's student loan scheme covering tuition and allowances, has been criticized for partial coverage that excludes full housing costs in high-demand Gqeberha.
"We reject the normalisation of student homelessness," declared the DASO-SRC, capturing the desperation driving the action.
University Management's Response and Legal Measures
NMU management has emphasized dialogue while resorting to forceful measures. They claim prior engagement with the SRC addressed many issues, with remaining concerns processed through formal channels. However, students dispute this, pointing to inaction on core problems.
The pivotal response was the February 13 High Court interdict (Eastern Cape Division, Gqeberha), barring student organizations from blocking access, unauthorized entry, or protesting near premises. Non-compliance invites police enforcement—a step already partially invoked.
This approach mirrors strategies at other SA universities, balancing rights with operational continuity. For insights into faculty experiences amid such disruptions, check Rate My Professor.
Escalation: Violence, Rubber Bullets, and Injuries
Tensions boiled over as private security and South African Police Service (SAPS) deployed rubber bullets against stone-throwing protesters. Videos captured chaotic scenes: students singing protest songs, fires raging, and injured peers with bloody noses being treated on-site. One incident involved a student detained in a police van post-rubber bullet impact.
"Universities are meant to be spaces of learning, not militarised zones," lamented EFFYC on social media.
Photo by Desola Lanre-Ologun on Unsplash
South Africa's Student Accommodation Crisis: NMU in Context
The accommodation crunch at NMU is symptomatic of a national emergency. Across South Africa, universities house only a fraction of needy students—NMU's 16% capacity (5,340 beds) falls short amid soaring demand. In 2025, NMU rejected thousands due to space limits, pushing many into unsafe private rentals or street sleeping.
Government initiatives like NSFAS accommodation allowances aim to bridge gaps, but implementation lags. Private accredited residences offer alternatives, yet affordability remains a barrier. For a deeper look at SA higher ed challenges, see related coverage on 500k university rejections.
NMU Student HousingNSFAS Funding Delays Fueling the Fire
NSFAS, funding over 1 million students annually, faces scrutiny for 2026 delays in approvals and disbursements. At NMU, protests spotlight how funding covers tuition but skimps on housing in pricey Gqeberha, where rents outpace allowances. Online portals exacerbate issues for rural applicants lacking data access.
- Delayed status updates prevent registration.
- Inadequate allowances for off-campus living.
- Budget constraints limit expansions.
Recent NSFAS circulars empower SRCs in housing vetting, a step toward reform. Explore scholarships and higher ed jobs for financial relief options.
Registration Bottlenecks: Barriers for First-Years
Registration woes stem from financial verification tied to NSFAS, excluding thousands. First-years from under-resourced schools struggle with digital processes, demanding extensions to April. NMU's accelerated onboarding succeeded for some but failed many, per student accounts.
This gatekeeping perpetuates inequality, as late registration risks module exclusions. Universities must streamline systems for inclusivity.
Parliamentary Oversight: Portfolio Committee's Role
Just days before protests, Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Higher Education visited NMU and Eastern Cape institutions to gauge 2026 readiness. Focus areas included capacity, NSFAS integration, and infrastructure. Their findings underscore vulnerabilities now manifesting in turmoil.
Committee reports recommend boosted funding and partnerships. For Eastern Cape updates, visit Gqeberha higher ed.
Parliament Media AlertStakeholder Perspectives and Broader Implications
Students view management as arrogant; officials cite procedural adherence. Experts call for holistic solutions like public-private housing ventures. Impacts ripple: delayed semesters, mental health strains, economic losses for Gqeberha.
In a nation with 500,000+ annual rejections, NMU's crisis warns of potential nationwide unrest. Aspiring academics can prepare via higher ed career advice.
Photo by Faith Eselé on Unsplash
Pathways to Resolution: Solutions and Future Outlook
Solutions demand multi-stakeholder action: NSFAS policy tweaks for full allowances, university bed expansions, digital registration overhauls. Short-term: dialogue forums, temporary housing. Long-term: infrastructure investments per national plans.
Optimism lies in recent collaborations. For job seekers in resolving such issues, browse university jobs, higher ed jobs, and South Africa academic opportunities on AcademicJobs.com. Share your views below and rate professors at Rate My Professor.
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