Deliver or resign! Housing MEC at Gugs backyarders meeting

13 02 2009
Gugulethu AEC Press Release
Venue: Gugulethu Sports Complex
Date and time: 15th of February at 14h00

In our last public meeting with MEC for Housing on the 2nd of November 2008, Mr Whitey Jacobs told our community and reporters that, for the past 15 years, there has been “no provincial housing plan for backyard dwellers in Cape Town”.  As media from the Argus, Times, the Sun, the Daily Voice and the Sowetan witnessed, he further promised that if he did not come up with a plan that satisfied residents within 2 months, he would resign from office.

At our weekly meeting on Sunday 15th of February 2009 at 2pm, the MEC will be presenting his ‘comprehensive plan’ for the backyarders of Gugulethu, Langa and Nyanga that, he says, includes dishing out over 200 houses for AEC backyarders.  He will also get back to us about his promise to build public housing for backyard dwellers in wealthy areas such as Muizenberg, Constantia and Mowbray.

We look forward to the MEC being the first minister to not break his promise to the poor.  But in the likely event that he does break his promise to provide us with houses, we will hold him to accountable to his promise – to resign if he does not deliver.

Contact Mncedisi at 078 5808 646 and Pule at 073 6448 919





APF Marches with Landless People’s Movement Protea South Branch to Johannesburg High Court

13 02 2009
Forced Removal/Evictions Must Stop Now
13 February 2009

The residents of Protea South informal settlement together with members of the Anti Privatisation Forum (APF) are marching to the Johannesburg High Court on today – 13th of February 2009. The Landless People’s Movement (LPM) is applying to the court to cease the City of Johannesburg’s programme of evictions and relocation. Marchers gathered at the Peacemakers ground in Protea South and have made their way to the Johannesburg High Court using buses and trains. Read the rest of this entry »





Solidarity: Landless People’s Movement v The City of Johannesburg

12 02 2009

Thursday, 12 February 2009
Landless People’s Movement Press Statement

Jo’burg High Court, 10:00 Friday 13 February 2009

Over the years we, the Protea South branch of the Landless People’s Movement, have marched many times and we have been arrested, beaten and tortured. Tomorrow will meet the City of Johannesburg in the High Court.
Our demands to the court are the same demands that we have taken to the streets:

1. The government shacks (i.e. the transit camp) must be immediately removed from our area. They are a deep insult to our human dignity.

2. There must be an immediate halt to all threats of forced removal to the human dumping ground of Doornkop. We are all, documented and undocumented, citizens of Johannesburg and we will defend our right to this city.

3. All basic services must be provided to our settlement. It is unacceptable for the government to declare our settlements to be ‘temporary’ and to then use that declaration as an excuse to withhold life saving basic services. We occupied this land and founded this settlement in 1985 – our community is not temporary. By refusing to provide basic services to shack settlements they are trying to turn our communities into slums so that they can then eradicate us from the cities.

The struggle of the residents of Protea South against forced removal and against government shacks and for the participatory upgrading of our community where we have been living since 1985 is strongly supported by the Poor People’s Alliance which is an unfunded network of democratic poor people’s movements made up of the following organisations:

Abahlali baseMjondolo (KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape)
Anti-Eviction Campaign (Western Cape)
Landless People’s Movement (Gauteng)
Rural Network (KwaZulu-Natal)

From Joe Slovo in Cape Town, to Kennedy Road in Durban, Ash Road in Pietermaritzburg and Protea South in Johannesburg we have one message:

Our settlements are communities to be supported, not slums to be eradicated.

Down with forced removals to rural human dumping grounds.
Down with government shacks.
Down with the Slums Act.
Down with the return to apartheid city planning.
Down with Mike Mabuyakulu.
Down with Lindiwe Sisulu.

For further information and comment on this case please contact:

Maureen Mnisi, Landless People’s Movement, Protea South: 082 337 4514
Thomas Maemganyi, Landless People’s Movement, Protea South: 072 613 2738
Moray Hawthorn, pro bono lawyer at Webber Wentzel: 083 266 1081

For general comment on the return to apartheid city planning (forced removals, transit camps, the Slums Act, peripheral ghettoes, police attacks on shack dweller’s protests etc) contact:

S’bu Zikode, Abahlali baseMjondolo: 083 547 0474
Maureen Mnisi, Landless People’s Movement: 082 337 4514
Rev. Mavuso, Rural Network: 072 279 2634
Ashraf Casiem, Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign: 076 186 1408





Bloody underwear protest in Johannesburg – to demand free water

12 02 2009

Louise McAuliffe
12 February 2009
Source: Sowetan

Women without water and sanitation are as good as dead and have no dignity
Related Content

An estimated 65 protesters demanding “free water for all” marched through downtown Johannesburg today – some wearing unwashed, blood-soiled underwear over their clothes in an attempt to demonstrate that access to water is a basic need.

“Women without water and sanitation are as good as dead and have no dignity,” said Petunia Nkhasi, co-ordinator of the ‘Coalition Against Water Privatisation’ campaign. Read the rest of this entry »





Annandale residents will have a meeting at Land Affairs after developers threaten them

11 02 2009
AEC press release on behalf of Annandale Farm Crisis Committee
Wednesday 11 February, 2009

Meeting with Department of Land Affairs
Time: 12th of February at 14h00
Location: Land Affairs, 8th floor, Nedbank Building

After residents informed Ronald Shell that they would only accept the first deal that was endorsed by the Department of Environmental Affairs and Development Planning (EADP), Ronald sent Toni – the social worker – to threaten the residents. According to Gys Tietie, she arrived on Friday the 6th and instead of speaking to the whole community, she began spreading rumors to all the residents.

According to another resident, Selmien Kock, “Toni said that the entire deal is now off and that residents will be evicted and will receive no compensation at all”. She added that the Anti-Eviction Campaign has no money and that Ronnie and the developers will squash any attempt at apposing the development.

Selmien and other residents are very angry at the way they are being treated and are calling for polite negotiations without threats and abuse. Residents know its illegal to evict any tenant without adequate compensation. 55,000 rand is clearly inadequate considering the multi-billion rand cost of the project and recommendations by the EADP.

Residents are therefore excited to get out their side of the story at a meeting hosted by the Department of Land Affairs. The meeting will take place tomorrow (12th of February) on the 8th floor of the Nedbank Building in Strand Street at 14h00. Developers Ronnie Shell and David Pearson from Blue Wave Properties 163 will be present along with a representative of the Anti-Eviction Campaign.

Selmien Kock at 073 234 3264
Gys Tietie 076 475 8359

For legal background and other info contact Ashraf from the AEC at 076 186 1408





Annandale: Families on land stand in way of R4bn project

10 02 2009
10 February 2009, 08:47
Source: Cape Argus

A R4-billion residential and commercial development which would create thousands of jobs, could be jeopardised because 27 families living on the site near Du Noon are reneging on an agreement to leave the land, the project’s developer says.

The land owner, Ronald Shell, said the families were tenants on Annandale Farm north of Bothasig and adjacent to the N7 highway, and had agreed to financial payouts to find other accommodation.

An agreement with the families signed in December stated that each household would receive either R55 000, or R25 000 and a Wendy House set up on a site of their choice. Read the rest of this entry »





Police fire rubber bullets at protesters

10 02 2009
February 10 2009 at 06:26AM
By Ntokozo Mfusi
Source: The Mercury

The police fired rubber bullets to disperse protesters barricading a bus depot at Ntuzuma, north of Durban, on Monday.

Residents of Kwamancinza, an informal settlement near Ntuzuma, were protesting against the eThekwini Municipality’s failure to provide them with housing and sanitation, and for a school to be built in the area. Read the rest of this entry »





AEC members tear gassed, beaten and arrested; residents lay blame on ANC

9 02 2009
Gugulethu AEC Press Update
Monday 9 February, 2009

Today, Mncedisi Twalo and Mbulelo Zuba appeared in Athlone Magistrate Court on charges relating to obstructing IEC voter registration.  They have now been released on 500 Rand bail and the case has been postponed until the 10th of March.  They have told us that they spent almost 24 hours without food and water – Gugulethu police seemed to be punishing the two leaders.

Unfortunately, we cannot quote the two activists due to the pending trial.  However, as residents, we would like make clear the following facts:

  1. The AEC and the IEC in Gugulethu were and are on amicable terms. We had negotiated with the IEC on the shared use of the Sports Complex and everything was peaceful.  IEC officials present at the complex will agree that residents did not obstruct any registration from taking place.  To confirm this, contact Pule (number below) and he will connect you with an IEC official who was present the entire time.
  2. ANC provincial chairperson Mcebisi Skwatsha and councillor Belinda Landingwe called the police and told them to attack residents during their meetings.  They also told police to arrest Mncedisi and Mbulelo.
  3. Police came and immediately attacked residents without warning. Thousands of residents were present, many were tear gassed, others were beaten (including a 9 year old child).
  4. Residents lost phones, IDs, purses and the AEC committee lost over 2,000 Rand which they had been collecting to buy T-shirts for residents.  We think that the money and items became spoils of war divided among police officers.

Residents are angry and claim that their right to freedom of expression, freedom to meet, and freedom not to vote, have been infringed upon.  They feel intimidated by the ANC and the police and they demand an investigation take place as to the ANC’s illegal actions against non-ANC residents in Gugulethu.

For more information, contact Pule at 073 6448 919 and Lenox at 073 4684 902.

For legal comment, contact Ashraf at 076 1861 408.

Previous day’s press statement below: Read the rest of this entry »





Top-down planning the real villain

7 02 2009

Source: Centre for Public Participation

In spite of the Joe Slovo and Khutsong disasters, it seems the new elite is still intent on pushing its own agenda, writes Imraan Buccus

National attention remains fixed on the unlovely aftermath of Polokwane and the electricity debacle. At times like this we often forget the ordinary people who keep the country going, and in whose name most of the major battles continue to be fought. Read the rest of this entry »





AbM: Once Again Our Children Are Being Evicted from Schools

6 02 2009

Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Release
Friday, 6 February 2009

Every child has a right to a decent education. Every child has a right to dignity in school. These principles are not negotiable.

Abahlali baseMjondolo has a yearly calendar. The last struggle of the year is usually against evictions because Christmas is always the worst time for evictions. Every year the first struggle is to get our children into schools. Before the movement was formed each family waged this struggle alone. Since 2006 we have run an annual back to school campaign. We run workshops informing people of their rights, we provide parents with fee exemption forms and help them to complete the forms, and we negotiate with schools and school governing bodies. We have to confront all kinds of discrimination against poor people and we have to confront racism. The first challenge is to get our children into schools. The second challenge is to ensure that our children are treated with dignity once they are in the schools. Read the rest of this entry »








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