The ‘Mandela Park 23′ to appear in Khayelitsha Magistrates court tomorrow at 9am

21 09 2009
Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Statement
on behalf of the community of Mandela Park
Update: 23h00 on 20 September 2009

What we know now:

  • 23 residents of Mandela Park were arrested by police today

  • All 23 activists will appear in Khayelitsha Magistrates Court at 09h00 tomorrow morning (21 September).

  • Residents will protest outside the court until their neighbours are freed

  • The senior prosecutor and the commissioner of Harare Police Station refused to let any of the 23 residents out on police bail even though they all agreed there was no risk in doing so.

Read the rest of this entry »





Unruly Police Evicting Families in Delft N2 Gateway Homes

16 09 2009
Delft Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Release
September 16, 2009

This evening the Delft police attempted to illegally evicting a family from their home in new N2 Gateway BNG government houses

The original owner received the house 2 years ago and, because she already had a place to stay, immediately handed it over to a family of 6 who have been the tenants of the house until now. The act by the owner proves that, since she had an alternative place to stay, the owner had no right to receive the free government house in the first place.

However now, over 2 years later, the owner has returned and is demanding the eviction of the tenants who have nowhere else to go except the human dumping ground of Blikkiesdorp. Read the rest of this entry »





Police Suppress LPM Youth March, But Our Frustrations Grow Stronger

31 03 2009

Press Release by the Landless People’s Movement

On the 26th March, the day before we, the LPM youth, were to have our march to demand that our councilor step down, the JMPD prohibited us.  The reasons the police gave for this were that we are violent and unruly and that they “know” us.  They referred to a march organised by the Gauteng LPM that happened in 2002 when we refused to leave Mbaziama Shilowa’s office.  This march, we explained, was not organised by the youth.   Regardless, they said they didn’t have the time and manpower to plan a safe and peaceful march and that if we carried out the march, they would be “hard” on us.  We took this to mean that they would arrest us over the weekend and also brutalise us by beating us and shooting us with rubber bullets.  The government will not meet with us, and now we believe they are even working with the police to suppress our right to express ourselves openly by marching.  There is a real problem in our democracy when the government and the police have time to suppress and brutalise us, but not to help us publicly express the demands that we feel will improve our futures.

lpm-pic1

The above picture shows the LPM youth in Protea South preparing for the march the day before they were told it was prohibited. Read the rest of this entry »





Landless People’s Movement (LPM) Sees Through Local Government Divide and Rule Strategy

26 03 2009
LPM PRESS STATEMENT
4 MARCH 2009

The councillor in Protea South, an informal settlement in Soweto, has repeatedly stated that she is accountable to the ANC government and not to the community of Protea South. This has undermined the ability of the community to work closely with our councillor to meet our basic demands. It should be made clear that, whenever the community has a mass meeting, it is under the banner of the LPM who represents the majority of the people in Protea South. The community of Protea South has been living there for 20 years with no changes in living conditions.

The previous 2 councillors, who were elected to represent the people of Protea South in the new democratic South Africa, delivered nothing. Now that the current local councillor has also failed to bring any development whatsoever in the past 4 years, the LPM is demanding that the councillor step down and be replaced by a community representative that accounts to the people of Protea South instead of any political party. Read the rest of this entry »





Gugs AEC activists to appear in Athlone Magistrates Court on Tuesday

8 03 2009

As part of the ANC’s campaign to undermine the independent social movements, Mncedisi Twalo and Mbulelo Zuba will appear in Athlone Magistrates Court on the Tuesday the 10th of March, 2009 at 10am.  The charges of obstructing the IEC are false accusations made by ANC provincial chairperson Mcebisi Skwatsha and councillor Belinda Landingwe – who had no business being at the IEC registration table to begin with.

Gugulethu residents and other AEC supporters will come out in numbers to support their comrades.

While police routinely arrest activists on false charges all over South Africa, almost all cases are dropped for lack of evidence.  We expect this one to be dropped as well.  Please come out and support us.  Help with legal fees would also be appreciated.

For more information, contact Pule at 073 6448 919 and Speelman at 073 9825 725.

For WCAEC legal comment, contact Ashraf at 076 1861 408.





Legal Support needed for Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers

8 03 2009

Hi there comrades!

For the 2nd time, Symphony Way residents are facing evictions.

Our children can’t go through another forced eviction – they have been traumatised too many times by the police. Every time the police or law enforcement arrive, our children run to their homes for cover because they fear the rubber bullets and pepper spray.

A few days ago, between 20-30 police vans escorted the sheriff of the court to deliver to us an application for eviction. They could have done it in a more civil way. We are people living here and not animals. While the sheriff could have spoken to us and delivered the notices in peace, instead, he decided to traumatise our children once again.

As poor pavement dwellers fighting against the bad government that seeks to hide us in concentration camps, we need your support. We ask for your solidarity when we go to the Cape High Court on the 20th of March 2009 at 10h00.

We also also ask for your help securing financial support for an attorney and advocate.

Each resident is contributing towards legal help but because we are poor, we cannot pay the exorbitant legal costs of such a landmark case. Any help, especially finding or funding an attorney to take on the case, would be appreciated.

Amandla! Qina Mhlali! Asiyi eBlikkies!

The Delft Anti-Eviction Campaign
Chairperson Jane Roberts
0784031302 or 0793051066





Media: Squatters ‘ready to die or fight’ for land

5 03 2009
March 04, 2009 Edition 1 (second edition below)
NOMANGESI MBIZA
Source: Cape Argus

The Symphony Way pavement squatters have received court eviction orders to vacate the area, but say they are “ready and prepared to die or fight” for their right to proper housing.

About 20 police vehicles entered the little pavement community on Monday to deliver the notices.

Kylie Hatton from the City confirmed that the notices were served and that residents had 21 days to vacate. She said alternative accommodation had been offered to them in Blikkiesdorp, about half a kilometre down the street.

“Some people have already accepted the alternative accommodation and we will assist anyone who would like to accept the accommodation,” she said.

The 127 families, totalling about 300 people, decided to squat on the road in Delft next to the RDP houses they invaded a year ago in protest at the lack of housing.

Last week they marked a year of living on the pavement with a series of events.

The families have received court papers ordering them to appear in the Cape High court on March 20. But they have vowed to die on the pavement rather than move to the Temporal Relocation Area (TRA) provided by the government.

“We are ready and prepared to die for our land and rights,” said resident Lilian Jansen. The residents labelled the TRA a playground for criminals and rapists.

“I know someone who lost everything in the Blikkiesdorp (Tin Can Town)… they took everything. I don’t know why they want us to live there,” said Mathilda Groepe.

“They bring the entire Western Cape police force to deliver court orders… for what, we are not criminals, and they even put on their bullet-proof vests when they got here, like they were entering a battlefield.”

The Anti-Eviction Campaign’s Ashraf Cassiem said: “The TRA is not a reasonable alternative accommodation… we cannot and will not be moved anywhere that will disadvantage ourselves.” Read the rest of this entry »





8 Landless People’s Movement Comrades Under Arrest in Johannesburg

3 03 2009
Landless People’s Movement Press Release
Monday 2 March, 2009

On Sunday morning, Maureen Mnisi and others from Landless People’s Movement (LPM) gave a petition from the Protea South community to their ward councillor, regarding various issues on which the voters would like to have a report-back. While the community members were signing the attendance register at the community hall, Maureen returned to her home. After 1pm, the councillor phoned her, claiming that the community was busy burning down the transit camp. Maureen went straight there. When she arrived, there were lots of police at the transit camp (nothing was burning), and people from the community were gathered on the other side of the road. Maureen asked people to go home. As she and others walked back, a hippo car started to shoot rubber bullets. Before she could reach her home, the police stopped their car and said they wanted to speak to her at the police station. She said she had nothing to tell them, as she was not involved in any dispute. They simply said she’s arrested and took her and others to the police station.

The arrested people are Maureen Mnisi, Maas van Wyk, Ivy Senona, Elsie Mkhuma, Shiella Mosenodi, Gasa Radebe, Micheal Dlamini, Chester Maluleke. The charge, as always, is public violence. They are still in custody. They have not yet appeared in court.

In South Africa the police always arrest movement activists on this charge – mostly after they have just been attacked and beaten by the police. Hundreds of our comrades have been arrested on this charge over the years but we don’t know of a single case were a person who has been arrested on a public violence charge has been brought to trial. They just use this charge as an excuse to arrest us, sometimes to assault and torture us while we are kept in their stations, to make us waste all the movements’ money on bail, to then keep delaying the case all the time forcing us to pay lawyers and to miss work and come to court until the judges throw the cases out because the police bring no evidence to court.

Elections are always a dangerous time for poor people’s movements in South Africa. Our marches are banned, we are beaten, arrested, sometimes tortured and sometimes even murdered.

Anti-Eviction Campaign Activists have already been beaten and arrested for taking a ‘No land! No House! No Vote! position for the coming election.  (See: http://www.abahlali.org/node/4780)

LPM activists were tortured during the 2004 national government elections when the took a ‘No Land! No Vote’ position.  (See the Amnesty International 2005 report on South Africa at http://www.amnestyusa.org/annualreport.php?id=ar&yr=2005&c=ZAF)

Abahlali baseMjondolo activists had their marches banned and were beaten and arrested inthe 2006 local government elections for taking a ‘No Land! No House! No Vote! position.
(See http://www.abahlali.org/mode/820)

In the same local government elections some people in E-Section, Umlazi, decided to run an independent candidate. Three people were murdered. (See http://www.abahlali.org/node/89)

The newspapers and the NGOs usually say that we must celebrated our ‘peaceful’ and ‘free and fair’ elections. They might have been peaceful and free and fair for them. If we refuse to vote or try to vote for an independent candidate we face assault, arrest and sometimes even torture and murder at the hands of the police. There is no democracy for the poor in this country.

LPM activist Thomas Maemganyi escaped arrest and can be contacted on: 072 613 2738





AbM: Electricity Disconnected and Three Women Arrested in Arnett Drive

19 02 2009

Thursday, 19 February 2009
Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Release

Yesterday at around 10am ten cars of Sydenham SAPS and Securicor Security Guards came with their guns to the Arnett Drive settlement to disconnect electricity from 200 households.  The private police came into Gertrude Cele’s house and said “Can you please turn on your radio.”  She turned it on.  Then, they said “The electricity is working so now we are arresting you”.  She said “You can’t arrest me because I am just a visitor here, and I don’t know anything.”  They said, “We found you in this house, so we are going to arrest you.”  This is how the police and private security make it a criminal offence to be a poor person in South Africa.
Read the rest of this entry »





Police Brutality: Delft’s many Rastafarians take to the streets and rally at Delft Police Station

27 01 2009
AEC Solidarity Statement
Tuesday January 27, 2009

** Note: This is not an AEC march.  We are supporting demands of residents and assisting in helping get the word out about their issues **

Delft’s many Rastafarians took to the streets earlier today and rallied at Delft Police Station.

The issue at hand is the many instances of police brutality and abuse Rastas suffer because of their way of life. The most common abuse is when police single them out and searching them so that they can find them in possession of Dagga (Marijuana) and extract a bribe from them. Read the rest of this entry »








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