CPUT shuts building after flood

One student arrested, suspected of causing flood and “more arrests expected to follow in due course”

Photo of the front of CPUT

The Bellville campus student centre and parts of the administration building of the Cape Peninsula University of Technology had to close after it was flooded on Friday morning. “The person who did this cost us a roof over our heads,” said a student. Archive photo: Ashraf Hendricks

By Velani Ludidi

18 February 2019

The Bellville campus student centre and parts of the administration building of the Cape Peninsula University of Technology had to close after it was flooded on Friday morning. The flooding is suspected to have been deliberate. A student has been arrested.

University spokesperson Lauren Kansely said, “The building will remain closed until deep cleaning of the space has concluded. Access times to the venue will be re-evaluated once it reopens. The reason for the flood is being investigated by SAPS and one suspect has already been arrested with more arrests expected to follow in due course.”

Students without accommodation who were occupying rooms have been affected by the flooding.

“The sabotage of institutional infrastructure affects innocent students’ right to use the facilities and services they require,” said Kansley.

“We are still waiting for the housing department to assist us and now there is water,” said analytical chemistry student Asiphe Maholo. “The university now has reasons to ask us to vacate as the building is unsafe to be occupied. The person who did this cost us a roof over our heads.”

The SRC, which is led by the EFF, declined to comment directly on the matter. Its secretary general, Sihle Ngxabi, said, “Our students are losing patience and once they totally lose it, there are no guarantees. We as the central SRC are also losing patience because our masses are getting the impression that we have lost our radicalism; too diplomatic in approach and taking time to solve problems. The truth of the matter is that we are exhausting all diplomatic processes so that there is no one to blame when things get sour.”

The student centre at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology remained closed on Monday following a flood on Friday. Photo: Velani Ludidi