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NSFAS must explain non-payment to 200 000 university students


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NSFAS must explain non-payment to 200 000 university students

NSFAS must explain non-payment to 200 000 university students

29th March 2017

By: African News Agency

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As many as 200 000 university students have still not received their National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) grants.

The Democratic Alliance (DA) on Wednesday said the anomaly came to light during an oversight visit to the University of Venda by the Higher Education Portfolio Committee.

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“Yesterday, the Portfolio Committee could not meet on the campus of the University of Venda due to violent protest, triggered by the delays in the payment of NSFAS grants,” said DA MP Belinda Bozzoli.

These grants, distributed through the “sBux” voucher system, are used by thousands of students all over the country to pay for private accommodation, food, books and travel.

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“It was revealed that some 200 000 university students across the country have not yet received their NSFAS grants,” said Bozzoli.

“The DA will today write to the chair of the Portfolio Committee, requesting her to urgently summon the NSFAS chair, Sizwe Nxasana, to the committee to explain how this crisis unfolded.”

Bozzoli said a technical problem in NSFAS’s centralised system “apparently led to the inability to make these payments”.

As a result, hundreds of thousands of students – many from extremely poor backgrounds – have been seriously disadvantaged in the first vital weeks of their studies. Reports of students going hungry on various campuses are rife.

Bozzoli said the Committee also received reports of students on TVET campuses, such as the Sekhukhune TVET College in Groblersdal, dropping out as a result of not being able to pay their expenses.

“Payment of NSFAS funds in TVETs appears to be both cumbersome and slow as well as insufficient in many respects,” said Bozzoli.

“The DA was first alerted to problems with the sBux scheme at the beginning of March at the University of Mpumalanga, where the campus was also closed as a result of protests over the NSFAS delays. Our subsequent letter to the Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande was never responded to.”

Bozzoli said the DA said it believes this issue has been covered up and that it is only the student protests that has brought it to light.

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