Media: ‘This is an ANC plot’

6 05 2009

Note: If Zille actually bothered to find out anything about the communities involved, she would realise that the protesters are organising outside of political parties and challenging both the ANC and DA which both refuse to provide them with basic services.  BT Section and other communities in Site C don’t care who won the Western Cape, they care about whether or not they will get electricity. Contact the residents to find out the truth.


Zille says Khayelitsha demos are political

May 05, 2009 Edition 1
ELLA SMOOK, BRONWYNNE JOOSTE, NATASHA PRINCE and NOMANGESI MBIZA
Source: Cape Argus

DA LEADER Helen Zille has accused the ANC of “making a formal decision to render the Western Cape ungovernable”, suggesting it is behind the sustained violent protests in Khayelitsha.

The ANC has hit back, branding Zille’s claims “a complete fabrication”.

The ANC lost control of the province to the DA in last month’s elections.

Zille said she had been told “categorically” that the ANC was planning to make the province ungovernable. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Plato up for job of mayor

5 05 2009
05 May 2009
Anna Majavu
Source: Sowetan

With Cape Town mayor Helen Zille relocating to the premier’s office, service delivery head Dan Plato is tipped to move into the mayor’s seat.

Plato, the former head of housing, is the frontrunner for the position, although formal elections will only be held on May 13 at a special council meeting.

All the political parties will put up mayoral candidates, but the DA’s candidate is likely to emerge the winner, as the party has the most councillors.

Cape Town councillor Anthea Serritslev declined to confirm that Plato was the DA’s candidate.

Serritslev said the DA caucus would only choose its candidate next Monday.

In control of a R24billion a year budget and with a backlog of more than 200000 houses to wipe out, Plato also faces the challenge of winning the confidence of the communities he will be expected to serve.

Some say he is as elitist as the ancient Greek leader, Plato, who believed the “philosopher king” to be the ultimate leader.

“Plato’s appointment would be a disaster. He doesn’t speak the language of the poor,” Shackdwellers’ leader Mzonke Poni of Khayelitsha told Sowetan.

Gympie Street residents association chairman Willy Heyn said if Plato became mayor, “then we are going back to the apartheid era”.





Gympie Street residents overcome eviction, again

2 05 2009
Woodstock Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Release

Gympie Street residents are relieved to finally be free from the stress and trauma of the past few years in which Pastor Robertson has been threatening to evict them. This final case was decided on April 30, 2009 in favour of the defendants.

Gympie Street residents were originally evicted in 2006 but had moved back into different dwellings in the same building. The government along with Pastor Robertson then charged residents with a contempt of court case which residents easily won on the 20th of November 2008.

This week, in her final judgment, Judge Fredericks argued that the Gympie Street residents’ case was actually already at the high court in 2006. Since the residents had moved into different dwelling in the building, Pastor Robertson and the City of Cape Town could not use an old and invalid eviction order. Read the rest of this entry »





Anti-Eviction Campaign to pressure the city and province after death of 1year old who was turned away from three CT clinics last week

22 03 2009

Sunday 22 March 2009
11am

The Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign decided at its provincial meeting yesterday to take up the case of the deceased one year old, Unabantu Mali, who died on her grandmothers back last week after being turned away from three clinics in Nyanga, Gugulethu and KTC. Unabantu’s grandmother walked from Nyanga East to Gugulethu to KTC, barefoot, seeking help for Unabantu and being rejected at each clinic. She had no money to get to Red Cross hospital.

The family have welcomed our support and we will be with them every step of the way until criminal prosecutions are carried out.

1. We condemn the department of Home Affairs. They have refused for the past three years to rectify the ID document of Unabantu Mali’s grandmother, Ntombizodwa Mali. She is 62 years old and looks her age, yet her ID book says she was born in 1970. This has created endless problems for her and her family.

2. We condemn the DA city and the ANC provincial government. Nobody has stepped forward to offer to pay for baby Unabantu’s funeral which takes place in Nyanga East this Tuesday. Yet after she died, you had MEC’s and Mayors all taking advantage of the situation to appear on TV seeming sympathetic to the family. The family is utterly destitute – there is no breadwinner and there are no windows or burglar guards on their house – people keep breaking in and stealing what little they have. Why has the MEC Marius Fransman not mobilised some kind of support for the family?

3. We condemn Helen Zille and city manager Achmat Ebrahim for saying that they conducted an “investigation” into Nyanga Clinic and found that baby Unabantu was never there, according to their records. This is utter nonsense. They questioned a couple of nurses who tried to cover up for their murderous behaviour – what nurse will make a note in her records to say a sick and dying baby appeared and was turned away? The fact that the city took a mere three days to do this pathetic investigation shows their disdain for the Black citizens of Cape Town (which is nothing new).

4. The Anti-Eviction Campaign will set up a desk to monitor the situation in clinics in Gugulethu and Nyanga. A community meeting offered great support for this initiative. We want to assure the public and the government that we will be on their case like they have never imagined possible.

5. We also blame the Red Cross childrens hospital for releasing baby Unabantu while she was clearly still sick.

6. Tomorrow, we will go with the family to open criminal cases against the city and the provincial governments.

The funeral will be at the family home in Nyanga East on Tuesday – please call AEC number below for directions.


Every step of the way, the Anti-Eviction Campaign in the province has decided to be with that family.


For comment call Mncedisi Twalo on 078 5808646





700 Delft Symphony Way residents to serve city of Cape Town with individual notices to defend eviction application

9 03 2009

Monday 9th March 7:30am

About 700 residents from Symphony Way, Delft will today serve the City of Cape Town’s lawyers, Cliffe Dekker Inc., and the Cape High Court with individual notices of intention to defend the application to evict them to “Blikkiesdorp” – a terrible, silver shackland, temporary relocation area.

We are confident of winning the case because we are in possession of the letter of instruction from DA councillor Frank Martin, telling us we could take over Delft houses (from which we were later evicted).

So the DA took us out of our backyard houses, put us in new houses, evicted us from there onto the side of the road, and now wants to evict us again. The ANC is supporting them.

For comment, please contact Jane Roberts at 078 403 1402, Mncedisi at 079 305 1066, and Kareemah at 078 492 0943

AEC legal co-ordinator Ashraf Cassiem on 0761861408.





Squatters to defy council

3 03 2009

About 600 people camping along a busy highway in Cape Town have vowed not to vote after being warned yesterday that the city council intends to ask the Cape high court to evict them.

And the DA now faces a showdown with the community, which has vowed not to move, just weeks before the elections.

The 98 families rented backyard rooms in Delft when they received letters from DA councillor Frank Martin in December 2007, instructing them to occupy new government N2 Gateway houses.

In the letter, Martin wrote: “You are hereby given authorisation in my personal capacity as a public representative to move into a house at Delft. ”

At the time, hundreds of people rushed from the meeting to collect their furniture and then moved into the houses.

They were evicted three months later, but the backyard rooms they came from had already been rented out, community leader Karima Linneveldt told Sowetan yesterday.

“We had no choice but to camp here on the side of the road. It’s because of the DA that we left our rooms, so how can they evict us again?” Linneveldt asked.

She condemned the city’s decision to relocate the community to the “Blikkiesdorp” area just kilometres away – a government-built shack community housing more than 1000 people.





Martin should be fired, say families evicted from houses (1st and 2nd Editions)

20 02 2009
February 19, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe
Source: Cape Argus

Today almost 130 Delft families living on a pavement marked the first anniversary of their eviction from the N2 Gateway houses they occupied illegally.

The families, which include 200 children, woke for a 4am prayer meeting to mark the date of the eviction.

They were also due to hold a slide show depicting their evictions and life on the street before concluding with a mass meeting to discuss what to do next.

The Delft pavement dwellers were evicted from houses which Democratic Alliance councillor Frank Martin had told them to occupy, said resident Jane Robert.

She said the experience was traumatic, particularly for the children.

In a statement this week, the City’s multi-party disciplinary committee found councillor Martin “guilty of writing and distributing numerous letters, in terms of which he purported to authorise members of the ward he represented to occupy houses in Delft”.

He has been suspended from the council for a month without pay.

But yesterday the angry homeless families said Martin should be sacked because he had betrayed them and rendered them homeless.

“Frank should lose his job. It’s surprising that he still has it. We are deeply disappointed with corruption in government,” said Frances Arnolds.

The Cape Argus visited the community yesterday, where some families live in makeshift shelters.

Wind-blown sand batters the shelters and blankets the belongings of residents.

“Promises by the government come to zero when it concerns the poor. We should not vote for any political party,” said Robert.

She said she was worried about how the families would survive the looming winter rain and cold. “It’s hard to live here. Last winter it was terrible,” she said.

Mathilde Groepe, 55, said: “When we occupied the houses, Frank promised to take political responsibility (for) the whole thing.

“But he damned and denied us in the high court. It is agonising,” said Groepe, breaking into tears.

She said she had been on the housing list for 13 years but three years go discovered that her name had been deleted from the database. Read the rest of this entry »





Mitchell’s Plain Traders still protesting their exclusion

31 01 2009

The following is a letter by Mitchell’s Plain Concerned Hawkers and Traders Association as they continue to protest against Helen Zille’s crusade against informal business in Cape Town. All of Cape Town’s townships have to deal with anti-traders by-laws promoted by all the political parties. This is why the AEC is proposing: No Land! No House! No Trading! No Vote!

Good Day Cllr Gabriels,

We would like to thank you for standing up for the traders of Mitchell’s Plain. We know exactly what took place on 3 December 2008. We were present at that meeting. A hearty thanks to Cllr I Salwary as well.

It’s shocking to see what the DA stands for , empowering the rich rather than the poor. It’s disgusting to think they come out to our poor people voting time, but when the very same public who votes for DA turn to the DA for help, they simply do what they did on 3 December 2008. We would like you to know how we feel. Taking our livelyhood away will destroy us emotionally, financially and mentally, knowing the high cost of living, school fees, groceries, ect. Read the rest of this entry »





City attempting to evict Mitchell’s Plain traders

18 01 2009

Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Release

The City of Cape Town has been attempting to evict traders and hawkers from Town Centre in Mitchell’s Plain for years.  The City refuses to consult with the actual traders and but instead deals with an undemocratic front organisation called the Mitchells Plain United Hawkers Forum that tows the City’s line on every issue.  A few months ago, the City passed a new by-law which allowed for the eviction of hawkers and traders from Town Centre which is seen as a blight on the ‘real businesses’ such as Shoprite, Pick n’ Pay and other big business chains.

The Mitchell’s Plain Concerned Hawkers and Traders (MPCHT), a democratic association of hawkers in the area representing over 800 traders, have been attempting to oppose their eviction but have been ignored and sometimes even lectured by City officials.  The following letter is an appeal by the organisation to Li Pernegger of Neighbourhood Development Programme Unit of the National Treasury to investigate how the 300 million rand allocated to upgrade the Town Centre was used without consultation and to the detriment of traders and hawkers in the area.

For comment, please call Mrs Mieshka Cassiem at 073 128 6657

Sea a previous press release on 27 July, 2008. See also this Voice of the Cape article.

For more research, see the City Council meeting minutes in which the City votes against the concerns of the traders citing that the undemocratic Umbrella Structure had already been consulted.  See also the map on page 20 which shows how extensive the prohibition of informal trading is intended to be.  It is essentially evicting all informal traders from the entire CBD area of Mitchell’s Plain if they cannot afford an expensive trading bay permit.

———————————

Good day Mr Pernegger,

I refer to my fax that was sent to your office on  January 2009. Mr M. Hendricks from the City has contacted me and had a brief discussion regarding the Mitchell’s Plain Town centre CBD, however he has not answered our questions.  It was very unprofessional from a city official to call me up and explain a few things “telephonically”.  In the same time he advised me to take legal action. Officials and politicians must realise that they are playing with our livelihood which is so selfish.  “If” this process goes ahead the rich will get richer and the poor will stay poorer. This is a very, very serious issue.

We as traders are South African citizens as well and has the full right to a full breakdown of the R 304 000 000. 00, which was requested to upgrade the Mitchell’s plain Town Centre.

We request the following:

  1. A full break down of how this funds was used.
  2. Which companies received the contract from the City
  3. Was it properly advertised in the media.
  4. Are there still funds left.
  5. Which city officials signatures are on receipts.(Mr M Hendricks was very dubious)
  6. Which officials works with each other on this project.

Mr Hendricks could not answer me, but explained that he administer the funds.  We request the above by no later than the 24 January 2009.

Mr Malcolm Fritz of the city Ombudman’s office has our complain as well.  This problem has been going on for years where officials are dealing with and unconstitutional body, which is the umbrella body (Mitchells Plain United Hawkers Forum), but on councils report 1 May 2008 council accepts The  Mitchell’s Plain Traders Association to manage the Town Centre, which are the same people on the umbrella body, now according to the memorandum of agreement (31-10-1996)  council clearly states that the agreement is valid for six months only, which means this is nul and void. I often ask myself who is fooling who. I have proof of all these documents. Council officials are well aware of this but conveniently throws a blind eye to all this.  We had a meeting with Mr Paul Williamson, Mr Allistair Graham and Mr Waleed George with our attorney Mr I Higgins and Mrs L Swartz regarding the objections on 16 September 2008 and our objections was not resolved. Officials lied in their report to council stating that it was resolved.  I am in possession of an affidavid from our attorney, kindly advised if this should be faxed to your office.


We have lodge a complain with Mr Grant Pascoe as well on 25 November 2008 promising us that he would gladly assist us but on 3 December 2008 on full council meeting all the Democratic Alliance officials voted against the traders.  Do the officials realise how many of us will be unemployed?  We call on National Government to intervene in this matter.

The town centre is surrounded by a sub-economic area, where most of our people don’t even have decent home or a proper meal to eat on a daily basis, but funds was requested to upgrade the town centre. Why wasn’t these funds use to give better homes to the people of Mitchell’s Plain, but to upgrade a shopping centre for the private investors to invest in “OUR” township. Many years ago our parents was thrown out of District Six, now that we have sustained ourselves over the years, government comes again and want to remove the traders against there “will” from their current trading bays, this is going to lead to bloodshed. We call upon all “HONEST” officials to come out to us as the traders and hear what we as traders have to say. Officials are public servants and there salaries gets generated from the rate payers monies and we form part of the rate payers. We do not want  Mr Waleed George of Golden Rewards, he clearly states that he has embarked on a full and extensive public participation with the traders, this is a blatant lie. How can this process go forward with all this corruption. I thought corruption lies only in National Government? Makes us wonder what’s happening in the City which is govern by the Democratic Alliance Party. If this process was followed correctly we would not go this far as to make everyone aware what is taking place in Mitchell’s Plain.

As the public we request a full  investigation into this matter.

Kind regards,

Mrs M Cassiem
Vice Chairlady
MP-CHATA
CONCERNED HAWKERS AND TRADERS
Tel: 073 128 6657





Passive Voting or Active Boycott: The True Question of Elections

13 01 2009

by Jonathan P & James Pendlebury
Zabalaza Anarchist Communist Front

This article argues that active abstention is the only strategic and tactical approach to the 2009 South African elections which is consistent with revolutionary anti-capitalist politics. It was written for a forthcoming issue of Khanya: A Journal for Activists, which will present a range of different approaches that social movements may take in response to the 2009 elections. It has been aptly noted that, on the ground, in townships and poor communities across South Africa, people’s faith has been restored in the ‘new’ ANC, that their hope has been renewed that change can come through bourgeois parliaments and political parties, be it the ANC or Cope – or the DA, IFP, ID, UDM, ACDP or PAC. For some, the response to this is that we, the extra-Alliance left, must consolidate our forces and contest elections against these parties in order to provide an alternative to their rule. But where is the alternative in so doing? Read the rest of this entry »








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