POLITICS

Solidarity threatens UKZN with legal action

University advertised bursaries and fellowships with different sums available depending on what race you are

Solidarity threatens UKZN with legal action over discriminating advertisements

18 April 2023

Solidarity today threatened the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) with legal action if the institution cannot justify the distinction it makes in the awarding of bursaries and fellowships based on race. This comes after the university’s Department of Health Sciences advertised bursaries and fellowships with different values for different races attached to them.

According to Solidarity, the university’s advertisement states that the bursaries are awarded to “black South African citizens” for masters’ and doctoral degrees to the value of R120 000 and R60 000 respectively, whereas the bursaries awarded to “other South African citizens” are only to the value of R80 000 and R45 000. Fellowships in this faculty are awarded in a similar manner.

“It is unacceptable to penalise students and young people who are not black, especially in a country like South Africa where the unemployment rate is increasing all the time. To think that a university, an institution that should be able to understand how important higher education is, can argue like that, boggles the mind,” says Anton van der Bijl, Solidarity’s deputy chief executive for legal matters. “As if awarding bursaries with different values based on race is not enough, the faculty also offers paid fellowships where different salaries will apply to different races – not based on need or socio-economic circumstances, but purely based on skin colour.

According to Solidarity, the UKZN advertises post-doctoral fellowships at an annual salary of R320 000 for “black Africans”, while if “other South Africans” are appointed to the same position, they would only earn R280 000 per annum.

“The university pursues this unfair discrimination even further by trying to determine salaries based on race. The legal letter from Solidarity makes it clear that the university must come up with replies. If the university does not offer a satisfactory reply before 4 May 2023, we will challenge them in court and we will force the university to justify their actions,” concludes Van der Bijl.

Issued by Anton van der Bijl, Deputy Chief Executive: Legal Matters, 18 April 2023