AbM: Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha

7 12 2010

Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Emergency Press Statement 07/12/2010

A terrible fire is currently raging in the QQ Section settlement in Khayelitsha. More than twenty homes and the community-built creche have already been destroyed.  The fire is still raging and still destroying countless lives.

Shack fires are not natural disasters. They are a direct result of the contempt in which the government holds the poor in this country. Shack fires are political.We will never accept that it is normal for the poor to burn.

Those so-called social justice organisations that are calling for a politics of patience in which the poor do not directly and immediately confront our oppression take no account of THE FACT that our every day lives are an emergency. We live in crisis every day. We live in life threatening conditions every day. This is what drives us to the streets. We will continue to go to the streets until our humanity is recognised and we are treated with dignity. It is not our protests that are a threat to our society. Is the way that we are forced to live that is a threat to society. It is the oppression of the poor that is a threat to society.

We refuse to be patient. We refuse to accept that it is normal for human beings to have to live like this.

For on the scene updates and comment from QQ section please contact:

Mr. Qona 076 041 0057
Mbongeni 076 981 6945





Media: A crisis of dignity – 5 humiliating years later

31 01 2010

One of a human being’s most private acts is a daily ordeal for these families

Jan 30, 2010 8:25 PM | By Buyekezwa Makwabe – Sunday Times

Ntombifuthi Mdibaniso dreads answering the call of nature. The matric pupil has been cleaning up human excrement for the past decade – often with only plastic bags to cover her hands – to earn the right to use a neighbour’s toilet.

The humiliating ritual has become a way of life for the 19-year-old, who lives in a shack with her parents in a section of the sprawling township of Khayelitsha in Cape Town. Read the rest of this entry »





Mzonke Poni writes on ‘Public Violence’ before his trial (set to start on Tuesday 29 September 2009)

26 09 2009

Mzonke Poni, Chairperson of Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape, is scheduled to stand trial on the charge of public violence on Tuesday 29 September 2009. The charge, which carries jail time if there is a conviction, relates to a protest organised in opposition to state criminality against the Macassar Village Land Occupation. Mzonke has written this essay on ‘public violence’ in response to the charges levelled against him. Messages of support can be emailed to abmwesterncape@abahlali.org.

Public Violence

by Mzonke Poni, Chairperson of Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape

What exactly is public violence? Who really counts as the public? What really counts as violence? These are important questions that require clear arguments. Read the rest of this entry »





Angry residents attack off-duty cop ‘We’d rather die than live here’

17 08 2009
August 17, 2009 Edition 1 – Cape Argus
KOWTHAR SOLOMONS and FRANCIS HWESHE

AN OFF-duty policeman who was attacked and beaten over the head with a large rock by protesting Khayelitsha residents is in a serious but stable condition in hospital, police said this morning.

The officer, whose name police have declined to release, was attacked when he tried to drive through a barricade erected by residents of BT Section, Site C, Khayelitsha yesterday. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Cop fires on Cape Argus team

14 08 2009

Note: The police routinely shoot unsuspecting residents and their children without warning.  Generally, police justify their actions by saying residents are throwing rocks at them (this is often a lie).  It takes police shooting the media for newspapers  to actually public the truth.

14 August 2009, 12:22
By Kowthar Solomons

# Gallery: Khayelitsha service delivery protest


ca_protest4519_082547_1024x768
A policeman fired a rubber bullet at a Cape Argus news team during a service delivery protest in Khayelitsha’s Site C – despite the reporter having identified himself as a journalist.
Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Backyard dwellers demand change

11 08 2009
August 11 2009 at 01:18PM
By Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

Angry backyard dwellers in Khayelitsha’s Mandela Park – who burnt tyres in the streets of their neighbourhood – have given the provincial housing department a week to address their concerns or they will illegally occupy empty housing units in the area.

The residents, who protested there on Monday as police and private security guards kept a close watch, say they are at their wits’ end and want action now. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Khayelitsha residents to be briefed on solutions for service delivery

7 08 2009

August 04, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

THE CITY is to meet Khayelitsha residents next week to tell them what efforts have been made to address their concerns since the service delivery protests there two weeks ago.

Their complaints ranged from the need for relocation and better housing to electricity and water provision. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: ‘Rivalry and negligence’ to blame

25 07 2009
By Vuyo Mabandla – Weekend Argus
25 July 2009, 08:47

Residents in Cape Town’s informal settlements say political rivalry and negligence by leaders over a number of years, – and not direct political influence – are behind the spate of violent protests in the city in the past few weeks.

Residents of QQ section in Site B, Khayelitsha, said provincial, municipal and local leaders dating to former mayor Nomaindia Mfeketho’s time in office, had done nothing but “fight over positions and not attend (to) the people’s troubles”. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: ‘Meet our service delivery demands, Plato’

21 07 2009
By Francis Hweshe -  Cape Argus
Photo taken by Cape Argus. Click here for additional photos
July 21 2009 at 01:33pm

Disgruntled informal settlement residents have given mayor Dan Plato two weeks to respond to their service delivery demands.

The residents, drawn from various communities in Khayelitsha and Macassar Village, on Monday marched from Keizersgracht Street to the City of Cape Town to demand, among other things, relocation to higher ground, as well as better housing and serviced land.

ca_service_march_82_074857_1024x768.jpg

Read the rest of this entry »





AbM-WC march on the Mayor’s office

20 07 2009

Click here for additional photos of the march on the IOL website

(higher resolution photos available by contacting abmwesterncape@abahlali.org)








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