After Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato was slapped in Blikkiesdorp, the police have warned politicians not to enter the area without police backup. Read the rest of this entry »
Opinion: A Slap in the Face for More Than Just Dan Plato
24 11 2009Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: blikkiesdorp, elites, Fanon, ghettoes, plato, slap
Categories : Archives, Delft - evictions + resistance, opinion / academic articles
Opinion: Blinkers dorp
24 11 2009November 23, 2009 Edition 1 – Cape Times
CAPE TOWN mayor Dan Plato’s response to the angry residents of Blikkiesdorp does him no credit.
On a visit to the site last week, all the mayor could find to say to those complaining of conditions in Blikkiesdorp was that in fact the settlement was “among the best” of its kind in the city. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: blikkiesdorp, Dan Plato
Categories : Archives, Delft - evictions + resistance, opinion / academic articles
Opinion: The Underside of South African Democracy
14 10 2009Date posted: 13 October 2009 – SACSIS
Abahlali baseMjondolo is a shackdwellers’ movement. It was formed by and for shack dwellers in Durban in 2005. Since then the movement has extended to cities like Pietermartizburg and Cape Town. It now has members in 54 settlements. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: anc, criminals, elites
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance
Opinion: The Kennedy Road killings are akin to Stalinism and a threat to democracy
14 10 2009October 14, 2009 Edition 1 – Cape Times
Martin Legassick and Mzonke Poni
ON September 26 at 11.30pm, a group of 30 to 40 men wielding pangas, sticks and guns surrounded the community hall in Kennedy Road informal settlement in Durban. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: anc, John Mchunu, Martin Legassick, Mzonke Poni, Willies Mchunu
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance
Opinion: ‘Police lies exposed in court’
8 10 2009
Mzonke Poni, leader of Abahlali base Mjondolo in the Western Cape, and accused on a charge of ‘public violence’ had his case discharged in court on Tuesday 29 September for ‘lack of reliable evidence’. Mzonke conducted his own defence and he did so brilliantly. He led the three witnesses, one from the Metro Police and two from Cape Town’s anti-land-invasion unit, into contradicting themselves and each other. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: Martin Legassick, Public Violence
Categories : Archives, Macassar, opinion / academic articles
Opinion: How a poor people’s movement was crushed
6 10 200906 October 2008 – The Sowetan
BOLEKAJA! – Andile Mngxitama
“THE ANC has invaded Kennedy Road. We have been arrested, beaten, killed, jailed and made homeless by their armed wing.” Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: ANC militia, Andile Mngxitama, Kennedy Road, S'bu Zikode
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance
Opinion: Ethnic cleansing
4 10 2009Published: 2009/10/02 07:32:38 AM – Business Day
You report on the attack on the Kennedy Road settlement (Fund set up after Durban attack, September 30). The scale and seriousness of this attack have not been fully realised. It used ethnicity as the basis for displacing (maybe 1000) residents using threats, theft and physical attacks. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: Crispin Hemson, Kennedy Road, South African Police Service
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance
Opinion: Pogrom murders in the Durban area
2 10 2009Paul Trewhela says inquiry needed into attack on isiXhosa speakers
Paul Trewhela – Politicsweb
01 October 2009
A fascistic and xenophobic attack was made over two nights this week against a peaceful informal settlement in the Durban area, apparently in the name of the African National Congress, resulting in the murder of at least two settlement dwellers. The police appear to have made a principle of their absence, despite appeals for help. A dominant motive of the attackers appears to be ethnic hatred of isiXhosa-speakers. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: African National Congress, John Dube, Paul Trewhela
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance
Mzonke Poni writes on ‘Public Violence’ before his trial (set to start on Tuesday 29 September 2009)
26 09 2009Mzonke 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 »
Comments : 3 Comments »
Tags: AbM WC, Church Land Program, Public Violence
Categories : Archives, opinion / academic articles, Poor People's Alliance, Site B and Site C in Khayelitsha
Research: Mitchells Plain Town Centre – Informal Economy Within a Capitalist System
22 09 2009A UCT Masters Student Laura Huss has completed the an in-depth research report on the connection between the struggles of the Mitchells Plain Concerned Hawkers and Traders Association (CHATA) and South Africa’s economic system.
For more information on Mitchells Plain CHATA contact Mischka Cassiem 073 128 6657 & 074 525 7336
Contact the researcher, Laura Huss, at 0799 161 025 or MLaura.Huss@gmail.com
ABSTRACT: South Africa has become a player in the international system of capitalism that has enforced a core and periphery model of development. There are various ways to identify the structure of South Africa’s economy, but it cannot be ignored that there are informal and formal sectors that co-exist in creating jobs and income. The informal economy has been questioned all over the world for whom it benefits and fundamentally how it is even defined. This research will explore one area of Cape Town, South Africa: The Mitchells Plain Town Centre, which functions as an informal market for over 1000 traders and hawkers. This market has been subject to much objection by the City of Cape Town and has been under the threat of eviction for over 10 years. In order to understand informal trading in Mitchells Plain, I will question the fundamental structure of South Africa’s capitalist system. This research will attempt to understand the logic of capitalism on a broader scale in order to expose the contradictions for a society attempting to accept both informal economic practices and simultaneously appeal to the world system of capitalism. The analysis will then point to the fact that informal economies make up a large number of livelihoods within South Africa and cannot be ignored for keeping the social and economic system from collapsing.
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Tags: Capitalism, CHATA, Concerned Hawkers and Traders Association, Hawkers, informal economy, informal traders, Mitchell's Plain Concerned Hawkers and Traders, Mitchells Plain Town Centre, research
Categories : Anti-Eviction Campaign, Archives, Contact Us, Mitchell's Plain Informal Traders, opinion / academic articles, Reports, Solidarity
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