In mid-August 2016, the
Minister of Higher Education and Training was widely expected to announce fee structures for the 2017 academic year. This led to a revival of the fees must fall campaign under the hashtag #FeesMustFall2016.
August 10 August Led by Honourable Justice
Jonathan Heher, a former judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal, the Fees Commission began set 1 of the hearings. It included submissions and testimonies from student representatives and unions.
12 August The Council on Higher Education concluded that a 0% fee increase would be unsustainable and recommended an inflation-related increase for South Africa's universities in 2017.
14 August Calls were made on social media for students to shut down universities on 15 August. These purportedly came from the
South African Union of Students. Later in the day Minister for Higher Education,
Blade Nzimande called for calm stating that no decision had (yet) been reached about fees. Meanwhile, ANC secretary general
Gwede Mantashe reaffirmed the
National Executive Committee's prevailing policy of no fee increases at South African universities.
15 August Protests at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal and
Mangosuthu University of Technology over the purported fee increases lead to the suspension of the academic programmes at those universities. Police were deployed to some other universities in anticipation of protests. Blade Nzimande reiterated that no decision had been reached over fees for 2017.
20 August Protests broke out at
Walter Sisulu University's iBika campus in
Butterworth and Nelson Mandela Drive campus in
Mthatha. Hundreds of students blocked the
N2 in both towns and are reported to have thrown stones at vehicles. Police in Mthatha responded with teargas and several students were arrested in Butterworth. South African president Jacob Zuma instructs Finance Minister
Pravin Gordhan to "find the money" to ensure a 0% increase in 2017. This came despite
National Treasury's warning that this was unaffordable and Nzimande's earlier position that universities needed at least a 6% increase to avoid "collapse". The students conducted a feasibility study with an independent source and it was found that R60 Billion was lost in corruption annually and that free education at the same standard as it is paid (facilities, lectures etc.) would only cost R45 Billion annually.
23 August During protests at the
University of Witwatersrand a cleaner died as the result of an apparent asthma attack. A fire extinguisher was released in Jubilee Hall at the university campus. The cleaner was taken to hospital and discharged and treated. After discharge from hospital the worker died.
25 August Pravin Gordhan is reported as saying that if corruption could be addressed, South Africa could afford to cover university fees for students from poor backgrounds. This came shortly after outgoing rector of the
University of the Free State,
Jonathan Jansen told a press conference that he believed that there was no hope for South African universities.
September 6 September A group of students disrupted the Fees commission hearing and blocked University of Cape Town (UCT) vice-chancellor Max Price from leaving the venue. Protestors at the University of KwaZulu-Natal burn the Law Library at Howard College in Durban, including some rare early texts in
Roman-Dutch law.
19 September The
University of Cape Town suspended its academic project in anticipation of an announcement on the fees situation by Minister Nzimande. At 11AM Blade Nzimande announced that university fees would increase in 2017, but increases would be capped at 8%. He emphasized that
university councils would make the final decisions about fees. However he went on to say that the government was still engaging with stakeholders to come up with a way to provide financial assistance to students with annual family incomes of below R600,000. As an immediate response, students at the
University of Witwatersrand mobilised to shut down their campus, blockading entrances. The protesters claimed that all protest would be peaceful; however, they turned to violence when vehemently denied entrance to the Great Hall by heavily armed riot police. Concrete objects were destroyed and pieces were thrown at security guards who were defending the hall. The students were demanding "free decolonized education for black people". This was purportedly followed by students at
University of the Free State and
University of Pretoria.
October On 10 October students at the University of Witwatersrand gathered at the Great Hall, an area on the campus. The students were denied access to the hall by private security. They were soon replaced by the South African Police Force. In order to disperse the protesters the police fired rubber bullets, stun grenades and smoke grenades. 2 students were injured and 11 were arrested by police (recorded at approximately 11:00). By the afternoon the students started throwing rocks. One bus was allegedly burnt by students, but no proof was found. Students at the University of Pretoria picked up rocks and put them in bins as a sign of peace. On 19 October two security guards were allegedly attacked on the University of Cape Town campus during a protest with video evidence published by a number of news sites. Later that year protestors disrupted the University of Cape Town's Convocation Annual General Meeting during which campus food stall owners alleged that Fees Must Fall protestors had threatened them with violence during the protests.
Reactions The 2016 protests saw the movement lose momentum, due to alleged sabotage by the PYA (an alliance of the leading party, the ANC) and internal divisions. In response to the protests the South African government increased the amount budgeted for higher education by R17-billion over 3 years and stated that government subsidies to universities would increase by 10.9% a year. The protests also increased the use of
blended learning by South African universities to assist non-protesting students complete their courses. On 7 December the University of the Witwatersrand announced that it would be increasing student fees by 8%. == Police action ==