Since my piece about the fire at UCT appeared on PoliticsWeb I have been approached by several members of that university's community with more information. In general, these informants all wish to remain anonymous, and they all express distress at the state of the campus which they feel has been severely neglected for some time.
There is talk of piles of rubbish having littered the campus, providing fuel for fire and sometimes a suggestion that now that the UCT maintenance staff have been brought in-house, they have notably relaxed their endeavours - it being understood that once they have been brought onto the university's establishment, they are effectively unsackable.
In particular it was said that the gutters had not been cleared of leaves and twigs and that this had provided ideal kindling for the fire, which seemed to have started on the roofs of several of the affected buildings. Anyone who has lived on the mountain knows that continual clearing of the gutters is an essential precaution against fire risk.
There was also real alarm about the fact that while trees and bushes had been cut down as part of a fire-break, the dead trees and bushes had then been left lying on the ground to dry out, providing explosive tinder for the fire.
Other staff spoke of how they had regularly pleaded with "Maintenance" to clear the roof gutters of vegetation before the autumn and winter rains since the blocked gutters invariably produced roof leaks. Maintenance was so poor that every year buckets would have to come out again and again to catch the water coming in from multiple leaks - the same leak areas year after year because no repairs or maintenance had been done.
In general there was a tone of near despair about the way in which the university management has neglected the campus, allowing it to become run down and unsafe. The general assumption was that the fire was a disaster which had been long waiting to happen and that the UCT management was entirely culpable.