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South African students break through parliament gates in fee protest

More than 1,000 South African students broke through the gates of parliament in Cape Town on Wednesday in a protest against university tuition fees.

southafrican students protestMore than 1,000 South African students broke through the gates of parliament in Cape Town on Wednesday in a protest against university tuition fees.

Police fired stun grenades at the students when they refused to vacate the parliamentary precinct, where President Jacob Zuma was attending a budget speech delivered by the country’s finance minister.

Inside the building, security barricaded the doors inside the National Assembly, where the speech was being delivered.

Students have rioted across South Africa this week after the education minister announced that university fees would increase by more than 10 per cent.

In Johannesburg earlier this week protesters smashed windows, blockaded a major highway and beat up a motorist, who they claim tried to drive into them.

At Rhodes University in Grahamstown, in the south of the country, the police fired rubber bullets at protesters after they burned tyres and blockaded entrances.

Similar protests took place at the University of Cape Town and the University of Fort Hare in the Eastern Cape Province.

Report says students at university pay around 40,000 rand (3,000 dollars) for a standard arts degree and are obliged to make an upfront payment of 700 dollars before they start studying.

Meanwhile, almost all universities have suspended classes and examinations as the violence has spread.

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