Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders Association return to Cape High Court

Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign Press Release
30 August 2011

Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders Association return to Cape High Court

The poor communities and social movements in Cape Town are in solidarity with the poor landless people of Mitchell’s Plain who are being victimised by the City of Cape Town and the Western Cape Province.

The Democratic Alliance-led government has blood on its hands. The people of Hangberg and Imizamo Yetho were attacked by the government not a long time ago. Recently, the Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders have also born the brunt of DA-led state violence against the poor.

The rich and wealthy people who are mostly whites enjoy themselves in the most unequal city in the world at the expense of the poor. This is why we rebel.

The issue of the Mitchell’s Plain landless, like the rest of Cape Town’s housing crisis, cannot be solved through state violence. It must be solved politically.

The government of the Western Cape ahs stolen the land from the poor and they sell it to wealthy white South Africans and wealthy Europeans. Both the DA and the ruling party have failed the indigenous African people.

This is no longer an issue of service delivery. We are not being criminalised because we want our roads or our RDP houses to be built faster so they may just fall apart. The issue is about taking back the land – everywhere – so that the poor of this country no longer live waiting for their next eviction.

We, as the social movements and poor communities of South Africa say that the 21st Century is the century of the poor Africans and their rebellion. We demand control of our own land and resources. We want to build our own houses free from repression by the government. The poor are the majority in this country and we also have a right to decide on our own future.

The rich are sucking the blood out of the poor each and every day in this country. This, while the media are playing games with the poor because they only come when we burn tyres but ignore us when the majority of the quiet repression against us is deemed ‘low profile’. From 1994 up until 2011, many journalists have been roped into the payroll of political parties.

The poor in South Africa are a step ladder for the few to get rich very quick. We as the majority know that freedom shall come our way eventually.

Forward to the struggle of the poor! Forward!

For more information, contact:

Charles (M’Plain Backyarders) @ 0746895980
Gary (Newfields Village) @ 0723925859
Mncedisi (Gugulethu) @ 0785808646
Khaya (Mandela Park) @ 0780241684