How the World Cup will impact poor communities in South Africa

30 11 2009

Eva Davids from the Anti-Eviction Campaign (AEC) in South Africa talks about the impact of the 2010 Football World Cup on her community in Athlone.





UK Media: Grassroots movements plan to boycott South African poll

20 04 2009
By agency reporter
20 Apr 2009
Source: Ekklesia

As South Africa prepares for its national elections on Wednesday 22 April, many grassroots organisations in South Africa plan to boycott it in protest, reports UK development agency War on Want.

During elections in 2004, the Landless People’s Movement (LPM) initiated the ‘No Land! No Vote!’ campaign to express a vote of no confidence in the range of political parties on offer in the elections.

The group Abahlali baseMjondolo (ABM, literally ‘people living in shacks’) joined the boycott during the 2006 local elections and changed the campaign slogan to ‘No Land! No House! No Vote!’. Read the rest of this entry »





Women of St James Street in court to prevent eviction

7 04 2009

Woodstock AEC Press Release on behalf of St James Street

When: 8th April 2009
Where: Cape Town Magistrate Court @ 09h00 am
Who will win court case? It will be the Women of St James Street, as Steer & Co will definitely lose out.

ALSO: Gympie Street in court today 7th April.  See previous press release.

The tenants of St James Street, all women, received eviction letters from the landlord on the 18th September 2009 to vacate the property on the 30th November 2008. There’s a standing agreement between the lessee / lessor and the tenants pay their rent every month on time. If someone can evict you for paying rent on time, then I’m afraid this democratic system is only valid for the corrupt capitalists who always like to enrich themselves at the expense of the poor. It also seems that landlords around Woodstock simply ignore the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa’s section 26 (2 & 3). The 2010 World Cup has become our worst nightmare. We are being evicted and the rich are going to use the 2010 World Cup to become richer, while the poor become poorer. Across South Africa and Africa, including in St James Street, the poor are having their houses taken away, we are having our food taken away, and we are having our dignity taken away. We all are refugees of one system – the capitalist system.

We invite each and every one especially the Social-Movements, Cosatu, NGO’s, etc, to come to the Court in solidarity.

For further information contact:

Sharifa- 072 553 1326, Aysha- 073 132 8746, Zehir- 082 492 5207 / Willy- 073 144 3619 (WAEC)





Gympie Street and St James Street Appear in Court on the same day

6 03 2009
Woodstock AEC Press Release
Friday 6th March, 2009

Throughout Woodstock, slumlords have continued their attack on tenants.

In the lastest salvo, Mr Hofmeyer from Steer & Company is attempting to evict people from their houses in St James Street. As part of this, 6 households of St James Street have been required to appear in the Cape Town Magistrates Court on the 11th of March 2009. On the very same day, two households from Gympie Street also have to appear in Court at the same venue. This latest attack by the Robertsons and the likes of Steer & Company is aimed denying people their right to housing.

As the Woodstock Anti-Eviction Campaign we condemn this latest move by these landlords to throw people out of their homes and community. These landlords grow fat and rich; while the poor suffer.

For more information contact Willy Heyn (WCAEC and Gympie Street) 073 144 3619  or Sharifa Daniels (St James Street) 021 447 4973 or Aisha Hoosan (St James Street) at 073 132 8746

For general information on evictions, contact Ashraf Cassiem (WCAEC) at 076 186 1408





Solidarity: Green Point informal traders evicted by City

17 02 2009

Statement by the United Green Point Traders Alliance

When the construction of the new 2010 stadium in Green Point Cape Town, was underway the city under the leadership of the DA and ID, promised that all the current informal traders (at Green point market) would be given alternative accomodation to trade, and that when the 2010 soccer world cup was over, they would be allowed back into the stadium forecourt.

Now the city has gone back on its word. There are currently over 400 traders but only 269 bays have been allocated at the new alternative site (the bowling green parking lot in Western Boulevard); in addition the city has imposed a new condition that only 25% of the traders should sell curios. Currently 80% of the traders deal with curios, and most of them are foreign nationals. The rules of the city fans the flame of divisions, fans the flames of xenophobia. The apartheid parties were masters of divide and rule – they get the masses to fight each other, while big capital laughs all the way to the bank.

The tactics of the city, of forced removals and then broken promises, shows that the DA has not broken from its apartheid heritage. If the DA and the ID cannot even keep their promises to 400 informal traders, what about the rest of the impoverished masses? The exclusion of many informal traders (many of whom have been there for 10 – 15 years) shows the myth of the much proclaimed free market of the DA. This ‘free market’ is in fact the domination of the capitalist class and death and starvation for the working class and the lower middle class.

All the traders want is a space to trade.

For weeks the United Greep Point Traders Alliance (UGPTA)  tried to get a negotiated agreement with the city, to no avail. Tomorrow, Sunday 15 Feb 2009, the UGPTA will be staging a picket from 8am to 12 noon, outside the new trading area in Western Boulevard, Green Point to highlight their demands. It is noted that the trading area is a prime spot that the capitalist Cape Town Partnership appears to be eyeing. Among the slogans raised will be:

2010+ DA+ ID = forced removals and starvation

world’s best mayor = responsible for hunger and starvation

For further comment on the protest call (from the UGPTA):

Rosheda Muller ph 0826561600
Jerome Behr ph 0827335772
Wagied Ebrahim ph 0829694456
Elsa Koen ph 0762166891
Lucas Usha 0835820399




Slums Act: AbM vs Gov (6&7 November)

3 11 2008
3 November 2008
Press Statement by the Abahlali baseMjondolo Youth League

Abahlali baseMjondolo Case Against the KwaZulu-Natal Eradication and Prevention of Re-Emergence of Slums Act to be Heard in the Durban High Court on 6 and 7 November 2008

Across the country the government is chasing the poor people out of the cities. Across the country we are mobilising to defend our right to the cities.

We are in the cities for good reasons – we need work, education, clinics, libraries and more. Pay is higher and prices are lower in the cities. Therefore we need land and housing in the cities. But the government only want our votes. They do not want us in the cities. Therefore we have said ‘No Land! No House! No Vote!’

In Joe Slovo, in Cape Town, the people say “Asiyi eDelft!”.

In Makause, in Johannesburg, the people say, “Stop the ‘Eradication and Prevention’ of our homes!”.

It is the same everywhere. The government want to make it so that if you are inside you are inside and if you are outside you are outside. The poor struggle to stop this business of putting some people to one side and other people to the other side. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Cape Town the most unequal city in the world

21 10 2008

Why inequality prevails in Cape Town

October 21 2008 at 10:25AM
By David McDonald (Opinion)
Source: Cape Times
Related Article: Ash Monday

I have been conducting research on the city of Cape Town for the past 15 years. My work has focused primarily on inequality in the city, particularly with regards to basic municipal services such as water, sanitation and electricity.

By some indicators, inequality in Cape Town has improved. There are more people with access to houses, water, healthcare, education and other important amenities – even with a rapidly growing population.

But the story is far from rosy, with Cape Town having one of the worst urban Gini coefficients in the world (a measure that compares income differentials of the richest and poorest). Read the rest of this entry »





Media: ‘Change outlook on housing’

6 10 2008

October 06 2008 at 08:44AM
Source: Mercury

South Africa in general, and Durban in particular, need to abandon the idea that a “world-class” city is a place where the poor are hidden from view.

This is among the recommendations in a report released on Monday by the Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, which is based in Geneva.

The centre argues in a report on housing issues in the eThekwini region that the South African government, cities and civic organisations should undergo a general paradigm shift regarding housing policy. Read the rest of this entry »





2010 Resistance: Pupils burn buildings to protest eviction

24 09 2008
Thabisile Khoza and Tshwarelo Mogakane
Source: IOL

Hundreds of toyi-toying schoolchildren picketed the 2010 World Cup stadium in Nelspruit after they torched a library and two classrooms in protest against being evicted from their schools.

The fire-bombed buildings are part of a new temporary prefabricated school built to accommodate pupils from the historic Cyril Clark High and John Mdluli Primary in Matsafeni. Read the rest of this entry »





Solidarity: Mapumalanga government using dirty tricks to steal land from community for 2010 stadium

24 06 2008

Mail & Guardian: Stadium show must go on

Justin Arenstien and Gcina Ntsaluba
Jun 25 2008 00:00

Mpumalanga’s provincial government is threatening to reverse a R63-million land claim settlement unless the farmworker beneficiaries agree to surrender a prime portion of their ancestral land for just R1. Read the rest of this entry »








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