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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Escalating NSFAS Crisis: Governance Turmoil at the Heart of South African Student Funding
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), a cornerstone of access to higher education in South Africa, is once again plunged into chaos. Established in 1991 and expanded significantly after the 2015 #FeesMustFall protests to provide bursaries for poor and working-class students attending public universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges, NSFAS supports over one million students annually. Yet, persistent governance failures have led Higher Education, Science and Innovation Minister Buti Manamela to place the organization under administration on May 4, 2026, dissolving the board and appointing Professor Hlengani Mathebula as administrator. This dramatic intervention, the third in NSFAS's history, stems from a cascade of resignations, audit disasters, and operational breakdowns that threaten the 2026 academic year's start for thousands of students across South Africa's 26 public universities and 50 TVET colleges.
At the epicenter of the storm is a bitter boardroom battle over executive appointments, particularly the CEO position, which has exposed deep rifts. The minister's move invokes Section 17A of the NSFAS Act of 1999, allowing intervention when governance impedes statutory duties. However, the remaining seven board members vehemently reject this, vowing an urgent High Court interdict to halt the administration, arguing procedural flaws and ministerial overreach. This standoff not only delays critical decisions but amplifies vulnerabilities in a system already strained by funding delays, data glitches, and unsafe student accommodations.
Timeline of Turmoil: From Resignations to Administration
The crisis unfolded rapidly in early 2026. In November 2025, chairperson Dr. Karen Stander resigned amid internal disputes. Dr. Mugwena Maluleke stepped in as interim chairperson, but tensions escalated over CEO recruitment. A confidential April 22, 2026, HR report revealed the board's human resources committee voted 4-1 for Waseem Carrim, with Karabo Mohale dissenting in favor of Professor Busani Ngcweni. Allegations surfaced of ministerial interference, including a secret meeting where Manamela reportedly pushed for his preferred candidate.
Resignations accelerated: Maluleke, Mohale, and others exited in late April, crippling quorum. On April 28, Manamela notified the board of his intent to administer, citing their inability to function. The board rebuffed in a April 30 letter, invoking the minister's own January 23 statement that matters were sub judice. Undeterred, Manamela announced the administration publicly on May 4, just before a parliamentary oversight meeting where the board might expose alleged meddling.
- November 2025: Chair Stander resigns.
- April 2026: CEO shortlisting rift; committee votes for Carrim.
- Late April: Mass resignations leave board quorum-less.
- April 28: Minister's notice of administration.
- May 4: Administration declared; Mathebula appointed.
Minister Manamela's Case: Audits, Irregularities, and Systemic Failures
Manamela justified the takeover with a litany of failures. The 2024/25 audit earned a disclaimer—the worst outcome—flagging material irregularities by the Auditor-General. Key issues include weak consequence management for fraud, data integrity lapses causing erroneous payments (e.g., to ghost students), stalled ICT modernization delaying appeals processing, and accommodation mismanagement exposing students to exploitative landlords. These echo 2025 scandals where R2 billion was lost to irregularities from 2016-2021.
Operationally, NSFAS struggled with 2026 funding: while approving 1.24 million students and disbursing R6.3 billion, 101,000 appeals backlog and direct payment glitches fueled protests. Manamela emphasized ordinary governance couldn't stabilize NSFAS amid these, positioning administration as a bridge to a new board. Student funding continuity is assured, with priorities on appeals, allowances, and university/TVET payments.

The Board's Revolt: Claims of Procedural Foul Play and Political Motives
The ousted board accuses Manamela of bypassing NSFAS Act requirements: no consultation, unfilled vacancies (minister refused to appoint six members), and no Section 4A directive. They argue historical sins (pre-2025) shouldn't doom them, highlighting improvements in allowance and accommodation payouts under their watch. Anonymous members allege the minister sought to install cronies for looting, timing the dissolution to dodge parliamentary scrutiny.
Led by Advocate Tlou Ramashia, the seven holdouts seek urgent interdict relief, aiming to suspend Mathebula's appointment and preserve status quo pending review. This legal clash could paralyze NSFAS further, as courts deliberate amid the academic year's ramp-up.
Photo by Mathias Reding on Unsplash
Who is Prof Hlengani Mathebula? Controversial Pick with Governance Pedigree
Mathebula, former SARS executive and Tshwane University of Technology adjunct, brings finance and higher ed expertise. Suspended in 2019 post-Nugent Inquiry into SARS governance under Tom Moyane, he later cleared and parted ways. Critics like the EFF question his fit, demanding parliamentary vetting. His 24-month mandate: overhaul governance, remediate audits, fix ICT, resolve appeals, and ensure safe housing. Success hinges on navigating board litigation and rebuilding trust.
For more on his appointment, see the minister's media briefing details.
Ripple Effects on South African Universities and TVET Colleges
Higher education institutions bear the brunt. Protests halted operations at Durban University of Technology (DUT), Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), University of Cape Town (UCT), and University of Pretoria (UP) in early 2026 over delayed allowances and registration blocks (34,000 affected). Students pawned laptops, faced hunger, and disrupted lectures, echoing #FeesMustFall.
TVETs, serving vocational training, saw 15,000 second-semester students prioritized, but systemic delays exacerbate dropout rates—already 57% in some provinces. Universities like Stellenbosch and Wits report strained finances from unpaid fees, while accommodation crises force tent living or unsafe digs, undermining dignity and safety.

Stakeholder Fury: Students, EFF, and Unions Weigh In
South African Union of Students (SAUS) slams the administration as undermining accountability layers, predicting repeats of past messes. EFF's Sihle Lonzi decries it as cookie-jar access, vowing litigation and mobilization. Democratic Alliance calls for Manamela's accountability, citing preventable collapse. Universities urge stability for 2026's 700,000+ new entrants.
Opinions diverge: some praise intervention for swift fixes; others fear politicization. For broader context, explore board's legal pushback.
A Pattern of Administrations: Lessons from NSFAS's Turbulent Past
This marks NSFAS's third administration: first in 2018 amid corruption probes, second in April 2024 under Blade Nzimande for similar woes. Each restored nominal stability but failed root fixes—ICT relics, fraud vulnerability, bloated structures persist. Stellenbosch University research highlights SETA/NSFAS inefficiencies draining 50% of the department's budget, fueling youth unemployment at 45%.
Path Forward: Reforms to Safeguard Higher Education Access
Mathebula's priorities offer hope: ICT upgrades for direct payments (piloted 2025, reducing fraud), rigorous accommodation vetting, appeal fast-tracks. Broader calls include decentralizing to universities/TVETs, blockchain for transparency, and NSFAS Act amendments for ministerial checks. Pretoria's VC warns of unsustainable models; a 'new system' may emerge post-GNU reviews.
Photo by Oleksandr Kurchev on Unsplash
| Key Reform Areas | Proposed Actions |
|---|---|
| Governance | New board post-audit cleanup; independent oversight |
| Funding Delivery | Direct bank payments; biometric verification |
| Accommodation | Accredited database; partnerships with unis |
| ICT | Modernization by 2027; integration with ID systems |
Outlook for 2026: Stability or More Disruptions?
With 1 million+ funded for 2026, NSFAS remains vital—enabling 60% of poor students' access. Yet, court battles risk mid-year chaos. Successful administration could model resilience; failure perpetuates protests. Stakeholders eye Parliament for accountability, while unis pivot to private bursaries. NSFAS's fate shapes South Africa's skills pipeline amid 32% unemployment.
For historical insights, review Manamela's full announcement.

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