AbM-WC: More than 500 people left homeless on fire at RR section

10 11 2008
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Press Release
Monday 10 November, 2008

No Electricity! No Vote!

For pictures please go to Khayelitsha Struggles at www.khayelitshastruggles.com

More than 100 shacks burned down over the weekend at RR Section Site B and left more than 500 people homeless including women, children and disable people.

It was early in the morning past one on Saturday when the fire started at RR Section and it started at one shack which is owned by a 30 year old man, according to the neighbor’s he was drunk and left paraffin stove unattended and most people believed that he was the cause of the fire.

RR Section is a home to more than 6000 families and the area was established late 80′s, and the area does not have electricity , as a results of that people use illegal connections, other people get electricity from nearby neighborhood which is serviced with electricity, Toilet and plots and others use illegal connections direct from electrical poles. Read the rest of this entry »





AbM: Shack dwellers march on Khayelitsha local gvt offices

4 11 2008

About 300 residents from 10 informal settlements in Khayelitsha and Delft marched to the local municipality offices in Ilitha Park on 21 October to hand a memorandum to the City of Cape Town highlighting their complaints over a lack of service delivery. Carrying placards reading ‘We are not yet Uhuru, lets fight together’ and singing political songs such as “uMshini wam’” and “Sohlala sinyova” (we will always protest), residents said they were sick of the bucket system and demanded flush toilets before next year’s elections.

Brenda Nkuna/WCN

They also demanded the electrification of informal settlements and the provision of piped water and roads.

Chairperson of Abahlali baseMjondolo – the shack dwellers movement – Mzonke Poni said a memorandum was sent to the City earlier this month which noted their concern that people living in informal settlements were ignored and their rights were being undermined.

Poni said informal settlement residents should be recognized as legal and not illegal occupants, as their lack of security regarding tenure allowed the government to forcibly remove them to “dumping sites”. Read the rest of this entry »





Soldiarity: LPM Mass Action Against Evictions and the Demand for Free Basic Service Delivery

29 10 2008

Landless People’s Movement Press Release

Join Gauteng landless communities (Freedom Park, Protea Glen Bond Houses, Protea South Informal Settlement, Precast-Lenasia Extension 11, Chiawelo, Tembalihle Crisis Committee, Eldorado Park, Harry Gwala Informal Settlement)in a peaceful March demanding free basic services, the removal of the useless ward councillors and a halt to mass evictions.  On the 30th October 2008, the march will start at Peacemakers Ground in Protea South and then proceed to Old Potch road and Union Road to deliver a memorandum to the Premier of Gauteng Paul “Mathousand” Mashatile.

Even though the government of the African National Congress is happy about what it has achieved in the past 14 years of democracy in terms of service delivery, the challenges that are facing the poor are immense and the gap between the rich and poor is widening. It is common knowledge that South Africa is one of the most unequal societies in world where more than 50% of the population live below poverty line (less than R20.00 a day) and almost 40% of the people are unemployed. The ANC is proud to say that they have created more than three million members of a black middle class since 1994 but this is in contrast to more than 23 million who live in abject poverty.   Read the rest of this entry »





Solidarity: Fire in KTC informal settlement

20 10 2008
Solidarity Statement
20 October, 2008

Gugulethu – Last night 10 shacks burned down leaving over 100 residents homeless.  Residents feel hopeless as they are not getting proper services by the government.  As usual, the root cause of the fire is lack of electrification and fire prevention materials in the area.

For comment, call Ben Londzi at 073-937-1924





Statement after the City Wide Shack Fire Summit

8 10 2008
Joint Press Statement by the Poor Peoples’ Alliance
Wednesday, 08 October 2008

Abahlali baseMjondolo (KwaZulu-Natal & Western Cape)
Landless Peoples’ Movement (KwaZulu-Natal & Gauteng)
Rural Network (KwaZulu-Natal)
Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign (Western Cape)
South African National Civics Organisations (eThekwini region)


The City Wide Shack Fire Summit called by Abahlali baseMjondolo was initially scheduled to be held in the Foreman Road settlement. It had to be moved to the Kennedy Road settlement after the Foreman Road settlement burnt down on 13 September leaving thousands destitute and homeless and Thembelani Khweshube dead.The Summit was attended by shack dwellers from all over Durban and from various organisations. It was also attended by Abahlali baseMjondolo members in Cape Town and representatives from our comrades in the Poor People’s Alliance – the Landless Peoples’ Movement, the Rural Network and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign. SANCO also participated in the event. This statement was written and approved by the four organisations united in the Poor Peoples’ alliance and is also supported by the eThekwini region of SANCO.

A State of Emergency

Statement after the City Wide Shack Fire Summit on 22 September

The day before the shack fire summit we held a mass prayer to mourn all those who have died in the fires. We mourned our comrades from Kennedy Road, Foreman Road, Cato Crest, Isipingo, Clairwood, Sea Cow Lake, Kimberly, Ermelo, Cape Town and Johannesburg.

Our struggles start from the fact that we are all human beings. We cannot allow the experts to define us, we define our own status. We define the situation that we face and how we choose to face it. Our summit was held so that we could define ourselves and our situation and then begin an open and public discussion amongst all shack dwellers’ organisations on how to defend ourselves and our communities from the fires. Read the rest of this entry »





Commentary: Slums built on the ashes of apartheid

24 09 2008

September 21 2008 at 01:42PM
By Imraan Buccus
Source: Tribune

Last Saturday almost the entire Foreman Road shack settlement in Clare Estate, Durban, burnt down, leaving thousands destitute.

The next morning residents found a body in the ashes.

Read the rest of this entry »





Solidarity to ABM KZN and Forman Road from ABM Western Cape

14 09 2008
Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape Press Statement
September 14, 2008
Power to the Poor!

Even if our whole settlement burns down, the reality is the land on which our community lives will remain our home.  A fire, like the devastating one yesterday at Forman Rd, will not change the way we view our homes. No matter how disadvantaged our communities are, we will not allow individuals who are on power to label our homes as slums because once we allow that they’ll will want to eliminate our homes and throw us in unsuitable asbestos filled temporary relocation areas.

These unnecessary fires can be prevented if our government was caring and democratic.  But this government is only democratic and caring about issues that matter to their pocket book.  Whatever we, as shack-dwellers, say to them does not matter.  Only our votes matter so that they can attain more power and enrich themselves further.

But there is one thing politicians know how to do very well: they know how to sit in local, provincial and national government offices and talk about us instead of to us.  Then, later on, they will claim that they have delivered services.  In reality, however, the only thing they are able to do from their offices is to deliver corrupt tenders to their political friends in the private sector.

Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape says Aluta Continua, where there is a will there’s a way.  Let us not be threatened by these shack fires and allow tsotsi developers to steal our land so that they can build shopping centers and unaffordable bond houses.  We’ve already seen them stealing the land of abahlali (residents) from informal settlements such as Joe Slovo in Cape Town, pushing them out of well located areas to unlivable dumping sites such as Delft.  Property developers, with their allies in government, are making business off of our land and entering into partnership with big monopolies in order to push the poor out of the cities.

Still, even though we are poor we are not stupid.  Let us not allow this corrupt government to shift the blame about shack fires away from themselves.  They want to discredit our communities instead of developing them; they want to force us to condemn ourselves for the poverty they have created; they want to create division in our communities so that they will be able to enter in between us and pit us against one another.

ABM WC supports the demands of ABM KZN:

  1. The South African Government must prevent fires in our communities by electrifying all the informal settlements at South Africa.
  2. We also call on the South African Government to release the land which is occupied by Abahlali living informally so that the land can be managed and owned by our communities.  We need to be recognised as legal occupants of the land so that we can develop our own communities.

Along with the Anti-Eviction Campaign and the Joe Slovo Task Team, ABM WC will be attending the first ever City Wide Shack Fire Summit on Monday 22 September 2008 to find new ways of preventing fires in our communities.

In soldiarity,

ABM Western Cape

For further details call Mzonke Poni (ABM WC chairperson) at 073 2562 036





AbM: Massive Fire Devastates the Foreman Road Settlement. Residents now resisting forced removals to transit camps

13 09 2008

Updates from Abahlali baseMjondolo on threatened demolitions by government and resistance to them in Foreman Road:

There is a good article in Isolezwe here.

—————————————————–

Foreman Road Abahlali baseMjondolo Branch
Press Statement, 10:00 a.m., 13 September 2008

A fire started at the bottom of the Foreman Road settlement at around 3: 00 a.m. this morning. There is only one tap in the settlement and it was impossible to fight the fire. Most of the settlement, at least a thousand shacks, burnt very quickly. Our neighbours called the fire brigade and they came and put the fire out. In 2004 the Municipality said that they would install fire hydrants. They started the work but never finished it. We have been left to burn.

Read the rest of this entry »





Solidarity: Massive shack fire in Foreman Road – a thousand shacks burnt, at least one death

13 09 2008

Abahlali baseMjondolo Statement

A fire started in the Foreman Road settlement at 3:00 a.m. this morning. Around 70% of the settlement has been destroyed, about 1000 shacks. One body has been found already but the debris is still very hot and it will take a while before we can be certain as to how many people have died.

Why are the poor being left to burn?

For information and comment about the catastrophic Foreman Road fire contact:

George Mqapheli, Chairperson of the Foreman Road Development Committee, 0782245441
Mnikelo Ndabankulu, Abahlali baseMjondolo Spokesperson and Foreman Road Resident,0797450653

http://abahlali.org/node/4013





AbM – A Big Devil in the Jondolos: A report on shack fires

9 09 2008

Monday 8 September 2008
Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Release

A Big Devil in the Jondolos
Abahlali baseMjondolo Launches a Report on Shack Fires in Advance of the City Wide Shack Fire Summit on 22 September 2008

Attachment Size
Big_Devil_Politics_of_Shack_Fire.pdf 1.25 MB
Big_Devil_Politics_of_Shack_Fire.word_.doc 282 KB

Today we are launching an important report on shack fires. We asked for this report to be written and we worked closely with the writer at all stages. We are releasing the report today so that it can be widely discussed in the lead up to the City Wide Shack Fire Summit called by the movement for Monday 22 September 2008. We will launch the isiZulu version of the report soon. We call on all organisations that are concerned with justice and that want a city in which everyone is safe to read and discuss the report. The report is on our website in word and in pdf. Printed copies are available from the Abahlali baseMjondolo library in the Kennedy Road settlement. Read the rest of this entry »








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