NEWS & ANALYSIS

Mcebo Dlamini gets R2 000 bail

Wits Fallist released on condition he does not disrupt university activity

Mcebo Dlamini gets R2 000 bail

Johannesburg - Fees Must Fall leader and former Wits University SRC president Mcebo Dlamini was granted R2 000 bail in the High Court Sitting in Palm Ridge on Wednesday.

"This is a sign that justice will always prevail," Dlamini said after the court set aside the Johannesburg Magistrate’s Court’s October 19 ruling denying him bail.

Judge Ratha Mokgoatlheng set three bail conditions: he is not allowed to make contact with witnesses, he is not allowed to interfere with the police investigation, and he is not allowed to disrupt campus activity. The judge said he was aware that the charges against Dlamini were serious.

Dlamini wore a green top and a black and white keffiyeh over his shoulders. His ankles were chained. He greeted fellow student leader Vuyani Pambo and smiled at students who had come to support him.

Mokgoatlheng said the magistrate’s court ruling that Dlamini would pose a danger to society was wrong.

"This court will furnish reasons which predicate the setting aside the denial of bail within 14 days," he said.

Dlamini is charged with violating a court order, public violence, assault, theft and damage to property. He was arrested on October 16.

This article first appeared on News24

Update:

I have been 'circumcised', annointed in prison - Mcebo Dlamini

Johannesburg - Former Wits University SRC president Mcebo Dlamini remained defiant after he was released on bail on Wednesday, saying he would continue to fight for free education.

"I have been circumcised. Prison to me was like an initiation. I appreciate the opportunity that they gave me. They took us to prison. They thought they were breaking us, they were annointing us," he told his supporters outside the High Court sitting in Palm Ridge.

Dlamini said he had no regrets, and that he had used his time in prison "to think about the future of the black child".

He added that he was worried about the conditions he saw while in prison.

"Young people are deprived of an opportunity because of the black government. When you go to Sun City [prison], the number of young people is shocking... What makes these young people go to prison is because of the hostility outside... We have a bigger role to play to liberate young black people."

He said people were forced into prison because of a failed state."When I was in prison, when I was undergoing the initiation process, they asked what are you going to do outside... The answer that I gave them is that we are fighting for free decolonised education... The struggle for free education must continue. There must be free education for the prison warders."His supporters cheered him on with ululation and resounding applause.

Some were even tearful at the sight of the Fees Must Fall student leader. Dlamini came out of court accompanied by fellow student leaders Vuyani Pambo and Shaeera Kalla. He was dressed in a grey T-shirt bearing Steve Biko's face, along with a black and white keffiyeh draped over his shoulders. Dlamini was arrested in October and has spent almost a month behind bars. He was originally denied bail by Johannesburg Magistrate Albertus Roux.

Judge Ratha Mokgoaltheng overturned Roux's ruling, saying it was not sound on facts and law.

Police previously said they had footage of Dlamini inciting violence and urging students to prevent others from attending class. The police also claimed that Dlamini assaulted a female officer during student protests.Dlamini denied this, saying that as a student leader he did not condone violence.

News24