Resign, UCT SRC head told

Vox Populi Vox Dei

High Tory
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So another prominent Rhodes Must Fall activist (conveniently not mentioned in the article, but Google her name and all will be revealed) falls on her sword.
Cape Town - “Resign, step down, recuse yourself.”

These sentiments were expressed by a group of UCT students who took to Facebook on Tuesday to call for UCT SRC acting president Zizipho Pae to resign.

Photographs of students and representatives of student organisations at the university bearing the call on placards were posted on the social media platform on Tuesday.

Pae sparked the uproar with a Facebook status update slamming a US Supreme Court ruling last week legalising same-sex marriages.

Pae’s status, which came two days after the court’s decision on Friday, reads: “We are institutionalising and normalising sin! Sin. May God have mercy on us.”

The comment has riled the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, who have expressed their dismay in the 232 responses to her statement.

Attempts to reach Pae for comment were unsuccessful.

Late on Tuesday the post, which has received 159 “likes” and 29 “shares” on the social media platform, had not yet been removed.

South African Students Congress (Sasco) UCT branch chairperson Siyabonga Ntombela said about 30 representatives of UCT’s LGBT community gathered at the SRC’s offices on Tuesday, calling for Pae to step down.

“It’s sad to me as a member of the LGBT community and I wholeheartedly feel that she must step down. As Sasco, we are also calling for her to resign. Other student bodies here include Rainbow UCT, Rhodes Must Fall and various others,” Ntombela said.

UCT SRC’s chairperson of Transformation and Social Responsiveness, Thato Pule, has resigned to protest against Pae’s statement.

“As a queer body, as a black body and as a trans body, I have failed. The acting president’s conduct is just evidence of how that space is suffocating and violent to my body. I am resigning so I can go heal,” Pule said, adding that although she connected with Pae politically, when speaking about queerness “she is not an ally, she is an oppressor”.

UCT’s SRC president Ramabina Mahapa, who is away on holiday, has since confirmed that the SRC would investigate.

Mahapa said the SRC was also investigating previous complaints cited as homophobia by members of the SRC and other UCT students, separate from Pae’s status update.

“The SRC recognises, upholds and fully supports Ms Pae’s right to religious and personal expression. However, the SRC strongly condemns and distances itself from the reckless and irresponsible public statement made by Ms Pae on June 28, especially pending her position as the head representative of the entire UCT student population.

“The SRC apologises for the hurt and alienation Ms Pae’s statement, in her position as acting SRC president, has brought upon the queer community and its allies, as well as the broader South African community,” he said.

Mahapa said the SRC had organised sensitisation workshops, but attendance by elected representatives had been dismal.

“We saw a general unwillingness by the majority of student leaders to recognise the queer community at UCT and the violence they experience. The fact you hold power means you have to problematise every action that inflicts violence on the people you represent.”

UCT Feminist and Gender Egalitarian Collective spokesperson Mary Racter said Pae’s comments were disappointing: “As someone with power and whose words have visibility, her comments add to a hostile environment experienced by LGBT groups despite a small legislative victory in a culturally relevant country.

“However, her comments are devastating if made in a political context, and if they are intended as an extension of the SRC’s view on the matter.

“There is the classic principles of separation between church and state, between one’s own opinion and what is made law, and we need to be careful not to let people in power violate those principles.

“Pae is not representative of women, or black women, or women in power.”

UCT spokesperson Pat Lucas said management supported the LGBT community and upheld the right of each individual to responsible freedom of speech and to voice their opinions respectfully.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/resign-uct-src-head-told-1.1878778#.VZOqrkaddfY
 
Cheese and rice ffs, What ever happened to going to uni to get an education?
 
Cheese and rice ffs, What ever happened to going to uni to get an education?

They are getting an education, on how to become an ANC politician. This type of activity is a minimum requirement for the ANC
 
You see what I'm talking about? Exactly why should I be banned?

Because those of us who aren't bigoted homophobes like nothing more than to persecute christians who are - that what you want to hear ?

Next we are going to ban Christmas.
 
Lol religion is messing up a lotta folks thinking. Why would one be bothered that other people are gay? Like seriously.
 
Cheese and rice ffs, What ever happened to going to uni to get an education?
Some people go there to get more out of it than just the academic side. Lost opportunity if you don't.
 
Lol religion is messing up a lotta folks thinking. Why would one be bothered that other people are gay? Like seriously.

The same reason that people bother that someone is a Christian who is not afraid to speak about his religion.
 
Cape Town - The UCT SRC has suspended one of its leaders, Zizipho Pae, after an outcry over her Facebook post: “We are institutionalising and normalising sin! Sin. May God have mercy on us.”

This was in reaction to the US Supreme Court sanctioning same-sex marriages.

SRC acting secretary- general Oyama Botha confirmed Pae’s suspension. She has since assumed Pae’s position as acting president of the SRC’s vacation committee while students attend Winter School.

Botha said the SRC had e-mailed Pae, asking her to explain her statement, whether she would apologise or retract her statement.

“If she fails to respond within 24 hours, the e-mail will be forwarded to the SRC vice-president Internal for remedial action,” Botha said.

“Pae was immediately relieved of her duties as acting president and has been suspended from the SRC vacation committee until the entire SRC returns and a formal investigation can be launched with an SRC quorum.”

She said the entire SRC resumed office on July 13.

Pae did not respond to Cape Times requests for comment.

The suspension followed a placard protest at the SRC offices by UCT’s community of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, asexual, agender and queer and others (LGBTIAQ+), calling on Pae to resign or be fired.

And SRC chairperson of Transformation and Social Responsiveness Thato Pule resigned in protest at Pae’s statement.

The complaint against Pae has highlighted the community’s frustration with UCT management over how similar complaints have been dealt with, said a member, and SA Students Congress (Sasco) UCT branch chairperson Siyabonga Ntombela.



Ntombela said they were dismayed that official complaints from the LGBTIAQ+ community had not been dealt with adequately.

This was echoed by SRC president Ramabina Mahapa. He said a number of complaints about homophobia had been lodged by members of the SRC and the general UCT student population.

UCT spokesperson Pat Lucas said the leaders of Sasco and the SRC were aware of the appropriate channels within UCT for following up on specific complaints.

“We invite them to do so. All complaints will be treated as confidential,” she said.

Lucas said their Discrimination and Harassment Office received six complaints last year dealing with gender discrimination, homophobia and same-sex attraction.

Of these, she said advice was given in two cases, a third complainant requested a room swop which was arranged, one case went to the UCT Student Tribunal and another was mediated. She did not mention the outcome of the sixth complaint.

Lucas said UCT had a long tradition of supporting LGBTIAQ+ rights. “For years the university has celebrated Pink Week in partnership with student group Rainbow UCT, a vibrant and active voice in our campus community that has helped to play a vital role in the transformation of the university.

“Of course, we recognise that UCT, like all other institutions, is part of a society where people still experience prejudice, harassment and abuse,” Lucas said.

Rainbow UCT’s Facebook page reads: “We feel that Ms Pae no longer represents us as LGBTIAQ+ students. We cannot and will not tolerate this kind of prejudice from elected student leadership. She must be held accountable. We also call on the SRC and all levels of student leadership to take self-education and sensit-isation more seriously .”

[email protected]
http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-afr...-out-over-gay-sin-post-1.1879384#.VZUFyOmKBes

Shame to gays. For decades they were persecuted for their lifestyle, yet they are the first to persecute others for their religious freedom. You would think they would be the first people not to persecute others given the persecution they went through. Shame to them.
 
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