The Dramatic Blockade at Wits University
On February 20, 2026, students at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in Johannesburg took bold action by blocking the Yale Road North entrance on Empire Road in Braamfontein, halting vehicle access to the Braamfontein campus. This marked day five of their protest against financial exclusion policies that prevent thousands from registering for the 2026 academic year. Chanting powerful slogans like 'We'd rather die than go home,' protesters from organizations including the Wits Progressive Youth Alliance (PYA), Pan-Africanist Student Movement of Azania (PASMA), Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) Student Command, and South African Students Congress (SASCO) disrupted traffic while demanding immediate access to education.
The scene was tense yet peaceful, with private security and law enforcement monitoring from afar. Students vowed to persist until their voices were heard, echoing the spirit of the #FeesMustFall movement exactly 10 years prior.
Explore higher education opportunities in South AfricaUnderstanding Financial Exclusion at South African Universities
Financial exclusion refers to university policies that bar students from registering due to unpaid fees, including historic debt accumulated over previous years. At Wits, students owing more than R10,000 are typically blocked unless they qualify for relief. For undergraduate students with pending credit debit (PCD) or re-registration exclusion threshold (RET) codes and debts under R120,000, registration is possible by signing an Acknowledgement of Debt (AOD).
This policy aims to ensure institutional sustainability amid R1.5 billion in total student debt but is criticized as a barrier perpetuating inequality, especially for poor Black students from rural areas or townships. The 'missing middle'—households earning R350,000-R600,000 annually—face particular hardship, ineligible for full NSFAS but unable to pay upfront fees.
- Debt threshold for general exclusion: Over R10,000.
- Historic debt cap for AOD: Under R120,000 for qualifying undergrads.
- Required payment for low-income: 50% of debt, then AOD.
High residence fees, starting at R55,000 annually (versus NSFAS cap of R52,000), exacerbate the crisis, leaving students stranded without funds to return home.Faculty positions at South African universities
Root Causes: NSFAS Delays and Historic Debt Buildup
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), South Africa's primary funding mechanism for low-income students, approved over 1 million for 2026 but faces disbursement delays. Issues include late funded lists to universities, R5,200 allowance backlogs, arbitrary defunding, and the 2023 accommodation cap excluding former beneficiaries from full support.
Historic debt at Wits stems from prior NSFAS shortfalls, parental job losses (e.g., retrenchments), and fee hikes (4.2% for 2026 residences, below 6.2% ministerial guideline). Nationally, NSFAS recovered R1.7 billion via SIU probes but excluded 129,264 students for failing criteria like 50% pass rates.
At Wits, around 9,000 were excluded in 2025, with tens of thousands affected in 2026 out of 42,000 total students. Only 37,207 have registered so far, leaving at least 20,000 in limbo.
Scholarship opportunities for South African studentsTimeline of the Wits Protests
The unrest began early February 2026 amid registration struggles:
- Feb 3: Wits extends registration, launches R20m Wits Registration Assistance Fund (WRAF).
- Feb 14-19: Hunger strikes by unregistered students demanding access (noted in prior year context but echoed).
- Feb 17: Official extension deadline passes; protests intensify.
- Week of Feb 17-20: Day 1 sees clashes with security, 30 suspensions (including 14 SRC members for 45 days).
- Feb 20: Day 5 blockade, memorandum submitted demanding debt relief under R150,000, two-week extension.
Protesters face off against guards, highlighting desperation.Related NSFAS delays coverage
Photo by David Samuel Levinson on Unsplash
Voices from the Frontlines: Student Perspectives
Student leader Zwelimangele Jamjam (SASCO/PYA) stated, 'At least 20,000 students remain unregistered... This is a structural indictment on the funding model.' Lebo Sebolao (EFF) added, 'We would rather die in the streets of Braamfontein than be deprived of an education.'
Antonett Khoza (SRC SG) decried her 45-day suspension as unfair. Protesters emphasize systemic violence: NSFAS defunding shatters dreams for Eastern Cape and KZN students unable to afford R10,000 registration or travel home.
For deeper insights into campus life, check Rate My Professor reviews from Wits faculty and students.
University's Response and Support Measures
Wits has implemented concessions: R20m WRAF covers 50% debt up to R50,000 for low-income; SRC Access Fund matched rand-for-rand (R6m additional); AODs for NSFAS-impacted; residence deposit postponements; former NSFAS cap victims cleared with AOD. Yet, capacity limits persist at 40,000 students.
Wits official registration update
Career advice for higher ed professionalsA National Crisis: Protests Beyond Wits
Similar unrest grips UCT (1,400 self-funded in limbo, 1,882 NSFAS drops), NMU (rubber bullets over NSFAS), and others. DHET notes 4.15% fee rise approved. Capacity crisis: 656k matric passes vs. 235k places nationally.
Parliament's Higher Education Committee expressed concern over hunger strikes.Jobs in Johannesburg higher ed
Stakeholder Views and Broader Implications
Government urges NSFAS efficiency; unions decry criminalization of protests. Impacts: Delayed studies risk dropout, unemployment; economy loses skilled graduates. Solutions include private-public integration, expanded TVETs, and NSFAS reforms.
Explore university jobs amid sector challenges.
Photo by Morgane Perraud on Unsplash
Pathways Forward: Solutions and Outlook
Short-term: Debt write-offs for
Students, leverage free resume templates for part-time work. Institutions, post openings at higher-ed-jobs.
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