Statement after the City Wide Shack Fire Summit

8 10 2008
Joint Press Statement by the Poor Peoples’ Alliance
Wednesday, 08 October 2008

Abahlali baseMjondolo (KwaZulu-Natal & Western Cape)
Landless Peoples’ Movement (KwaZulu-Natal & Gauteng)
Rural Network (KwaZulu-Natal)
Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign (Western Cape)
South African National Civics Organisations (eThekwini region)


The City Wide Shack Fire Summit called by Abahlali baseMjondolo was initially scheduled to be held in the Foreman Road settlement. It had to be moved to the Kennedy Road settlement after the Foreman Road settlement burnt down on 13 September leaving thousands destitute and homeless and Thembelani Khweshube dead.The Summit was attended by shack dwellers from all over Durban and from various organisations. It was also attended by Abahlali baseMjondolo members in Cape Town and representatives from our comrades in the Poor People’s Alliance – the Landless Peoples’ Movement, the Rural Network and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign. SANCO also participated in the event. This statement was written and approved by the four organisations united in the Poor Peoples’ alliance and is also supported by the eThekwini region of SANCO.

A State of Emergency

Statement after the City Wide Shack Fire Summit on 22 September

The day before the shack fire summit we held a mass prayer to mourn all those who have died in the fires. We mourned our comrades from Kennedy Road, Foreman Road, Cato Crest, Isipingo, Clairwood, Sea Cow Lake, Kimberly, Ermelo, Cape Town and Johannesburg.

Our struggles start from the fact that we are all human beings. We cannot allow the experts to define us, we define our own status. We define the situation that we face and how we choose to face it. Our summit was held so that we could define ourselves and our situation and then begin an open and public discussion amongst all shack dwellers’ organisations on how to defend ourselves and our communities from the fires. Read the rest of this entry »





AEC Political Prisoners released on parole after appeal is lodged

8 10 2008

Delft Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Statement
9 October, 2008

A few days ago, Jerome Daniels and Riedwaan Issacs were released parole after their lawyer lodged an appeal to the ruling of Magistrate Van Graan. Jerome and Riedwaan, who have been serving their sentences in Polsmoor and Goodwood prisons, where sentenced by Van Graan who argued that he needed to hold the defendants responsible even if they were not present during the incident and that he furthermore needed to “teach the Anti-Eviction Campaign a lesson”.

The AEC maintains that the ruling is both politically motivated and an attempt discourage poor South Africans from participating in social movements such as the Anti-Eviction Campaign. Residents of Symphony Way have stated that “if the justice system was fair, the Magistrate would never have sentenced Jerome and Wanie in what his judgment stated was in the interest of the community. Because if you ask anyone in our community, the judgment meant that we had lost two of our most tireless community workers. This was obviously not in our interest.”

AEC members went to welcome the political prisoners back home when they arrived out of prison. On their arrival, Jerome and Wanie thanked the Anti-Eviction Campaign and all the residents of Delft and Symphony Way who have continued to be there to support them. They said that they appreciated the petitions and pledges of solidarity from people all over the world.

Jerome also said that, though terrifying at first, the sentence was “a breeze” because he knew he had the backing of his wife, his children, and the community. They both said that the time in jail only made them stronger and they vowed to continue to fight against the continued oppression of their communities.

Unfortunately, Jerome and Wanie were not able to comment because the conditions of their parole preclude them from discussing the case. The AEC would also like to point out that, in addition to normal terms, their parole (in a political below the belt punch) prohibits them from working, in any way, shape, or form, with the Anti-Eviction Campaign.

For comment, call Ashraf at 076 1861408 or Auntie Jane at 078 4031302





Media: City needs transparency when dealing with poor

8 10 2008
October 08, 2008 Edition 1
Imraan Buccus in Daily News

Opinion: Report recommends greater consultation with communities in need of housing

The report on housing in Durban by the Geneva-based Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions (Cohre) is a watershed movement for this city. The report is the culmination of almost three years of work by an international team of experts and is the first comprehensive analysis of post-apartheid housing policy and practice in the city.

At 200 pages, it is a lengthy read but the basic findings are that there has been a national failure to implement the progressive 2005 Breaking New Ground policy and that, in recent years, there has been a shift from a pro-poor housing agenda to an anti-poor approach that takes the self-built housing solutions of the poor (shacks) rather than the lack of adequate housing as the key problem. This reached a peak with the highly controversial KwaZulu-Natal Slums Act. Read the rest of this entry »





Poem: Rise Like Lions

8 10 2008
Rise like lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number!
Shake your chains to earth, like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you –
Ye are many, they are few!

- Percy Bysshe Shelley (poem sung by the Women Garment Workers of NY)








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