29 November 2007
Solidarity: Pre-Dawn Arrests in Gympie Street, Cape Town
Urgent Press Release
November 29th 2007
6am
Gympie Street in Woodstock, Cape Town was invaded by police at 5am today.
The Gympie Street Residents Co-ordinating Committee of 6 people were all arrested including the Co-ordinator Willie Heyn.
They have been unlawfully charged with contravening the High Court eviction order that was handed down against them last year.
They will appear in the Cape Town High Court today.
This is a totally unlawful arrest since none of the residents contravened the High Court Order. The order was for an eviction of the residents, but after spending 6 weeks living on the pavement outside their homes in the winter (the City having failed to provide alternative accomodation) the residents went back into the flats, but NOT the flats they were evicted from. This nullified the court order. It was then up to the owner of the flats to get a new court order against the occupants which he failed to do.
It is clear that this dawn swoop is a reprisal for the Gympie Street active support for the Joe Slovo community who are also resisting a forced removal. Gympie Street participated in the march yesterday with Joe Slovo against FNB, evictions and forced removal and this has clearly angered the state who is now behaving unlawfully.
The Gympie Street lawyer is Advocate Zehir Omar – 011 8151720 or 082 4925207 or call Anna on 072 5036625
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Press Statement
Thursday 29 November 2007
4pm
WOODSTOCK, CAPE TOWN – Six residents of Gympie Street, comprising the co-ordinating committee, were arrested in their beds while sleeping this morning – at 5am.
They are Willy Heyn; Margaret Petersen (single mother of two children, the youngest being 12 years old); Lydia Portland (single mother looking after two children of her own and three of her sister’s children who is currently in hospital – one of these children is 3 yrs old); Marietta Monagee (single mother of three children aged 5, 8 and 10yrs old); Sarah Jones (looking after her grandchildren who live with her – aged 2, 3, 5 and 6 years old) and Zubeida Brown (single mother of 4 kids – one who is 20 years old is in a wheelchair since birth, completely dependent on her mother for all aspects of her care.)
The children were all left home alone all day today.
At 5am this morning, the police swooped on the co-ordinating committee and arrested them. The Six were then held at Woodstock police station for five hours and then taken to Cape Town Magistrates Court even though the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaing informed the police that their lawyer, Advocate Zehir Omar (who they know well) is based in Gauteng and would not be able to represent them in court today. We requested that the women be released to care for their children and given a future date to appear – but to no avail. The Six were held in the holding cells at the Cape Town Magistrates Court until 3pm when they were released on a warning and told to appear again in Court 25 on January 30th, 2008.
The backdrop to this story is a real tale of tragedy. These residents were paying their rent every month for years despite the owner never doing maintenance on the flats which are in a hazardous and rundown condition. Most of the residents are either jobless or doing casual domestic or factory work at pay of R50 per day so they have nowhere else to go and no possibility of renting other flats.
After the owner got a High Court eviction order against them last year, the residents were evicted to the pavement. The city refused to find suitable alternative accommodation for them despite there being available accommodation in Woodstock at the former hospital, which is standing 90% empty. About 100 people then slept and lived on the pavements in this crowded city area for about five weeks. The city told them to move to Happy Valley where each family would be given three sticks and a heavy piece of plastic to build a shelter. The residents refused because all their children are in Woodstock schools and because many of them are ill and cannot go and live in the sand far from the city.
Some residents were persuaded by the council to visit Happy Valley and see if it would be suitable. When those residents got there, they had the fright of their lives when the existing residents of Happy Valley told the Gympie Street residents that they would “burn them out on the first day” if they moved to Happy Valley.
As such, the residents are terrified of moving to Happy Valley, and at the same time are being forced out of Woodstock by a property developer. Their options are zero, which is unacceptable because the City has a responsibility to house the poor. The City has tried to dodge its responsibility by saying this is a private matter however, the Gympie Street residents are the City’s responsibility because these are poor people who should long ago have been allocated council housing like others on the waiting list.
Communities have vowed to mobilise to support the Gympie Street residents, as they did last year.
For comment call Mzonke Poni of the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign on 073 2562036 or Willy Heyn of Gympie Street on 073 1443619