Joe Slovo Arrest, Hanover Park Eviction, District Six High Court Eviction Case

23 10 2007

Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign

Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Release: Joe Slovo arrests, Hanover Park eviction, District Six high court eviction case tomorrow

JOE SLOVO INFORMAL SETTLEMENT – Joe Slovo Task Team leader, Mzwanele Zulu, and one other activist were arrested recently by the police. They were released shortly after with no charges being laid against them. It is clear that the police and the state are waging a campaign of harassment against Task Team leaders who are part of the mass community movement demanding free housing on the land of Joe Slovo, and an end to forced removals. It is unclear why Zulu and the other activist were even arrested in the first place. The Anti-Eviction Campaign demands that the harassment of Joe Slovo activists come to an end. The Campaign held another meeting at Joe Slovo on the weekend and resolved to increase the level of solidarity for the community. For comment call Mzwanele Zulu on 076 3852369

HANOVER PARK – The Newfields Village Anti-Eviction Committee is disgusted that an illegal eviction was carried out in the community today. A private indiviudal came along and threw out all the furniture of a single mother of two young children, who is currently in prison. This was done illegally since there was no eviction order, and only the Sheriff of the Court has the right to carry out an eviction. The Campaign immediately contacted the Cape Town Community Housing Company, which owns all the houses in Newfields Village, and was told by them that they condone such evictions. The Campaign is disgusted by this and has vowed to take action. For comment call Gary Hartzenberg on 072 3925859

DISTRICT SIX – The last remaining original households in District Six (17 families) will appear in the Cape High Court tomorrow. Their derelict houses are privately owned and the owner has been trying to evict the families for over one year. The owner wishes to sell off the properties ahead of the 2010 World Cup so as to make huge amounts of money. The families are all pensioners, have been living in the houses for decades and had a reasonable expectation that they would continue to do so until they died. The City of Cape Town has and the National Housing Department has consistently failed to make provision for poor renters of privately owned derelict accommodation. These kinds of families should have been allocated state housing along with the rest of the poor and working class citizens of the city, but they are now finding themselves out on the street at the age of 75 with nowhere to go. For comment call Ashraf Cassiem on 076 1861408 or Mrs George on 073 7068222

Dear Friends

The Cape Town Anti-War Coalition hereby invites you to a meeting this Saturday, 27th October at Community House, Salt River at 12h30.

We have invited Comrade Mzwanele Zulu from the Joe Slovo Task Team to address the meeting about the kind of support we can offer to their struggle.

Other items on the proposed agenda: (Please feel free to bring your own items)

1. Supporting the Anti-Eviction Campaign march to FNB Bank and Thubelisha Homes

2. Preparation for the international day of 60 years since the Palestinian Nakba (catastrophe of 1948 when the Palestinians lost most of their country)

3. Preparation for an event to mark 40 years since the youth taking Paris (in 1968)

4. Fundraising

5. Solidarity with the indigenous people of New Zealand, who are currently in prison facing bogus charges of “terrorism”

6. Next meeting

Please call 072 5036625 or 082 2020617 for more info. Taxi fares will be refunded if needed.





Anti-Eviction Campaign calls upon people to boycott the FNB

11 10 2007

By Marthe van der Wolf
10 October 2007

Source: Bush Radio

The Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign has called upon people to boycott the First National Bank if they support the residents of Joe Slovo.

FNB has apparently bought the land currently housing Joe Slovo residents for R5million. If the residents of Joe Slovo are forcibly removed, the bank could make huge profits.

“Everyone that is in solidarity with the people of Joe Slovo (are urged) to withdraw their money and go to another bank, ” says Gary Hartzenberg of the Anti-Eviction Campaign.

FNB claimed that it is not involved in the forcefull removal of the residents of Joe Slovo. They stated that all they wanted to do was ‘to assist in easing the housing backlog by creating affordable homes’.

“Ninety-five percent of the residents of Joe Slovo are unemployed and those who are working, get very low salaries. FNB knows very well that the residents cannot afford their R200 – R300 000 homes,” says Hertzenberg.





The purple shall govern – again!

7 10 2007
October 7, 2007 at 9:57 pm
Source: Afrodissent

ON A PAVEMENT in Burg Street, Cape Town, stands a double-sided graphic by renowned artist Conrad Botes (of Bitterkomix fame) commemorating the last protest march to be actively opposed by the apartheid regime in 1989.

During the staged sit-in, one of the protesters climbed onto a police vehicle and sprayed dye (meant to make the identification of protesters easier) from the mounted cannon onto the police, daubing the surrounding buildings in purple. The following day of the march, graffiti around Cape Town announced “The purple shall govern.” The next time a protest occurred in Cape Town, marchers were allowed to protest without police repression.

The memorial is part of a Sunday Times centenary heritage project and is remarkably relevant artwork, perhaps reminding us that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

On Thursday morning I watched hundreds – if not thousands – of marchers streaming in a joyous, ululating fashion through Cape Town station’s concourse. They were residents of the Joe Slovo informal settlement on their way to the Cape High Court where they are seeking to prevent their forced removal to Delft. The land the residents currently inhabit is to make way for the next phase in the N2 Gateway development (which the current Joe Slovo residents will not be benefiting from).

A few weeks ago, Joe Slovo residents protested violently, occupying the N2 highway for several hours. This column is not an attempt vindicate their behaviour, yet their actions – seen in a certain light – are understandable. It says much about the post-apartheid political landscape. We are faced with an increasingly disillusioned populace who are tired of the ANC’s empty promises. Frustration, steadily mounting at the appalling state of service delivery in South Africa, is sowing the seeds of explosive dissent which has not only been expressed that September day on the N2 but also in many townships across South Africa before that.

Government is out of touch with its electorate. Lindiwe Sisulu’s (who occupies the unenviable position of housing minister) haughty approach to the Joe Slovo crisis only serves to confirm this. Service delivery is clearly not a priority in a government obsessed with political survival against the backdrop of sordid succession race that is steadily tearing the ruling party apart.

Government’s indifference is not the only concern – so is the way service delivery protests are being treated by the police. In townships across South Africa, cases of violent (and incidentally illegal) police repression is being documented by the Freedom of Expression Institute (FXI). In a press release on the institute’s website, police reactions to a protest over housing in the township of Protea South is described:

Maureen Mnisi, a community leader and Gauteng Chairperson of the Landless People’s Movement, was arrested while trying to speak with the media. She and at least five other community members were taken into custody and released, without being charged, after spending the night in jail. FXI staff overheard a police captain admitting that he had “always wanted to arrest” Mnisi.

We were shocked by the police violence. SAPS members fired at random towards the protesters, leaving the pavement covered with the blue casings of rubber bullets. Police also deployed a helicopter and water cannon, and we saw at least two officers using live ammunition. One Protea South resident, Mandisa Msewu, was shot in the mouth by a rubber bullet, and several other residents were attended to by paramedics due to police violence.

The release goes on to explain that this is not an isolated incident, and cites examples from other areas.

The authoritarian – and more often than not unconstitutional – reaction to service delivery protests would suggest a frightened government at war with its own people. It is startlingly reminiscent of the previous regime’s brutal approach to protests and possibly explains our limp stance on oppressive basket cases like Zimbabwe and Burma.

South Africans fought for their rights once, and they will do so again. The sooner the government realises this the better.

Resources

“The day the purple governed”The Sunday Times
“Police repression in Protea South an indicator of a national trend” – FXI








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