21 December 2008
About 50 shacks burnt in the Kennedy Road settlement last night. This is the 8th fire in the settlement this year. Read the rest of this entry »
21 December 2008
About 50 shacks burnt in the Kennedy Road settlement last night. This is the 8th fire in the settlement this year. Read the rest of this entry »
DEVASTATED residents of the Kennedy Road informal settlement in Clare Estate, Durban, will not be spending Christmas in their homes after fire gutted nearly 30 shacks at midnight on Saturday. Read the rest of this entry »
Dear Mandela tells the story of shack dwellers coming together amidst epidemic levels of poverty and inequality in the new South Africa.
In KTC more than 35 shacks were destroyed and hundreds of residents were left homeless after a fire raged through the informal settlement early this morning. Read the rest of this entry »
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
Photographs by independent photographer Antonio Angelucci.
The following is a statement written by Mr. Angelucci. It has been translated into Italiano, Afrikaans and isiXhosa. At the first ever Pavement Exhibition on Sunday 12th October, this statement will accompany his photographs as well as corresponding photographs and statements by the children of Symphony Way.The Heart of Struggle
by Antonio Angelucci
I just got the news that the people living on Symphony Way will soon be evicted.
After being evicted in February by the Province from houses just across the street, the Municipality of Cape Town is now attempting to evict these same families for a second time. Very soon everybody will know when the eviction of the community will take place.
When I think about it, my mind wonders back to my first meeting with the Delft community. The weather was shit, the pouring rain was our soundtrack, but despite the rain and bouts of hail, the families there were busy organising the community in anticipation of their solidarity exchange with the Joe Slovo community.
Bunches of wood were being brought into the street from the nearby bush. Suddenly, around 7p.m., the lashing sound of the rain was disturbed by the crackling and intermittent thuds of the handmade communal fire. This sweet backdrop agitated against the coercive tyrant that was the wind and rain until, slowly and firmly, it cut into the obscurity of the night. It was then that the oppressive rain was wordlessly replaced with a background roar, and the suffocatingly cold wind was substituted with warmth from the people huddling around the fire.
I think of the fire’s little sparks that shine within the eyes of the people huddling around it. When I recall that soon someone high up will decide on the fate of Symphony Way, I can clearly envisage that the fire that fights against the rain will also shape the future of this defiant community.
And I hope that the mighty fire will not be blown out by a bitter winter’s rain…
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 »
The full text of the report (‘Business as Usual’) is available in pdf here or on the COHRE website.
COHRE Press Statement
Monday, 6 October 2008
The Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, based in Geneva, today released a report on housing rights in Durban. While recognizing the efforts of the eThekwini Municipality to build a considerable number of houses each year, the report concludes that the houses being built are often located so far out of town as to make them unviable for many people due to unaffordable transport costs to work, schools, and hospitals. The report also expresses serious concern about the size and quality of the houses that are being built and over the failure to provide adequate levels of basic services to shack dwellers while they wait for formal housing. In some instances levels of basic services in shack settlements are inadequate to the point of being life threatening according to COHRE’s research. Read the rest of this entry »
More than 25 people yesterday were left home less after the fire destroyed not only their shacks but almost everything that they owned.
The fire started just after eight last night (Saturday; 02/10/08) and six shacks burned down, people could not save their belongings at it was very difficult to to that because the area does not have streets in between and it is very dense, those who manage they only manage to save small things such as stoves, irons, kettles, DVD and televisions, those that were at work they could not even save their Identity Documents.
The cause of the fire is still unknown, the community executive committee is still investigating what might cause the fire as it started from the house which was empty and the owner was not at home at that time and there was nothing that was left unattended by at the house where the fire started.
XA has been existing for more than 15 years and still people does not have proper house, still living at shacks, not even a single toilet for people. The two taps that are working are broken and it is very difficult for the municipality just to come and fix the taps. The lack of tapes at the area made it also very difficult for people to fight the fire as the fire fighters only responded after 2 hours whereas are situated next to the area (they are just 1 kilomiter away from XA).
For pictures please vist www.khayelitshastruggles.com
For more information please call:
Ziyanda at 078 041 3541
The Secretory of the community committee: 078 941 8347
XA informal settlement is working with Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape and is one of 15 informal settlements that will be marching with ABM Western Cape on the 22nd October 2008 to the offices of local municipality at Khayelitsha: “Stocks and Stocks”. For more information about the march please call Mzonke Poni, ABM Western Cape Chairperson at 073 2562 036
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.