Category Archives: 2010 Fifa World Cup

Public Money, Lost Livelihoods & Evictions

Ashraf Cassiem of the Cape Town-based Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign discusses the impact of the World Cup on South Africa in an audio interview (http://www.pambazuka.org/images/articles/490/Ashraf_Amandla.mp3) [mp3] with Zahra Moloo. In his view, the country, and especially the poor, stand to lose as a result of hosting the World Cup. He highlights the vast amount of public resources spent on the tournament, the loss of livelihoods by traders and the eviction of the
poor from public land adjoining stadium sites as prime examples of this. Cassiem also talks about the Poor People’s World Cup organised by communities, with teams representing, in solidarity, ‘countries in struggles’, such as Palestine, Zimbabwe and Somalia.

South African activist Ashraf Cassiem on the World Cup

http://www.waronwant.org/overseas-work/informal-economy/hide/watch/16968-video-south-african-activist-ashraf-cassiem-on-the-world-cup

South African activist Ashraf Cassiem on the World Cup

This Sunday the whole world will be watching the final of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. The first ever World Cup held on South African soil, the tournament was a landmark event for Africa. But thousands of poor people have been evicted from their homes and the plight of the poor has grown worse in the lead-up to the games.

This Sunday the whole world will be watching the final of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. The first ever World Cup held on South African soil, the tournament was a landmark event for Africa. But thousands of poor people have been evicted from their homes and the plight of the poor has grown worse in the lead-up to the games.

In this video Ashraf Cassiem, Chair of War on Want’s partner the Anti-Eviction Campaign (AEC), discusses the impact of the World Cup on South Africans and the Poor People’s World Cup, a tournament of 36 teams from poor communities in Cape Town.

To hear more about the impact of the World Cup in Cape Town, visit our interactive panoramas from inside Blikkiesdorp, one of South Africa’s most notorious transit camps for poor people who have been evicted from their homes.

The Hidden Struggle Behind the World Cup

http://wsm.ie/c/hidden-struggle-behind-world-cup

The Hidden Struggle Behind the World Cup

The World Cup is over, the TV crews have departed, and the South African government must be happy. The world’s media portrayed it as the crowning achievement of sixteen years of post-apartheid development. With the African continent’s largest economy and one of the most progressive constitutions in the world, South Africa is considered by most to be a model middle-income developing country. Many in Ireland will look on with pride, happy that they helped play a part in the anti-apartheid boycott movement which helped to bring that terrible racist system to an end.

The Reality

However, there’s another side to South Africa – both in its history and its current circumstances, a side generally neglected by the western media, a side that the average person would need to seek out, a side that does not sit well with the rosy picture painted above. This side tells us that South Africa is the most unequal society in the world. It tells us that South Africa is ranked 129 out of 182 UN member states in the Human Development Index – 19 places below the besieged territories of Gaza and the West Bank.

It tells us that it has steadily become worse since the mid-1990’s when Nelson Mandela’s ANC government voluntarily adopted neo-liberal economic policies, privatising water and electricity. Average life expectancy has dropped by 13 years in this time. This side makes clear to us that although racial discrimination is no longer tolerated; the issue of class is still firmly on the table.

The Farce

It is in contrast to this stark reality, that the approximate €3.5bn spent on hosting the World Cup comes sharply into focus. The ANC has done everything in their power to airbrush their dirty secret out of the vista of the average football tourist and journalist. Whether it is by building walls around the shack settlements close to Cape Town’s international airport, or clamping down on casual traders around the stadia where they make their living, or by banning protest marches for the duration of the World Cup, the ANC are adamant that the spectacle will be unblemished.

The Opposition

In response to these problems, there has been a huge growth in social movements – the Poor People’s Alliance made up of the Landless People’s Movement, the Rural Network, the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign and Abahlali baseMjondolo (Zulu for “people based in shacks”). South Africa now has one of the world’s highest per capita protest rates. Over the past several years, the country’s largest social movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo has been at the forefront of grassroots direct action against inequality.

Emerging in 2005 in the Kennedy Road settlement during the course of a dispute over housing with the local ANC city councilor, the shackdwellers movement has grown to include over 30,000 members in more than thirty informal settlements throughout the province of KwaZulu-Natal. They practice a politics that is of the poor, by the poor and for the poor and reject electoral politics and the interference of NGOs.

They provide practical solidarity in their communities – reconnecting electricity and water supplies and resisting evictions, while also developing a sustained voice for shack dwellers, marching on the offices of local councillors, police stations, municipal offices, newspaper offices and the City Hall in actions that have put thousands of people on the streets. The movement also organised a highly contentious but very successful boycott of the March 2006 local government elections under the slogan “No Land, No House, No Vote”.

The Repression

Naturally, given the interests of the ruling-class in South Africa, Abahlali have faced increasing repression in the past year. On 26th and 27th September 2009, a mob of 500 people attacked the Kennedy Road settlement in Durban, targeting members of Abahlali in particular. Not a single person has been arrested for this violence, yet 12 members of Abahlali are still facing the courts – with no evidence presented thus far. Their next day in court was conveniently set for the day after the World Cup Final. Other members are in hiding since this event, spurious arrests are continuing.

The Good Example

Abahlali is one of the largest, most inspiring, participatory, non-hierarchical, and direct action oriented social movements existing in the world today. Let us learn from their example.

Find out more:
Abahlali baseMjondolo (shackdwellers movement) – www.abahlali.org
South Africa’s anarchists at www.zabalaza.net

South Africa Solidarity Soccer at the U.S. Social Forum

Social movement activists at the U.S. Social Forum in Detroit play soccer in solidarity with the South African Poor People’s Alliance for their World Cup resistance – June 25, 2010. contact tejunyc@gmail.com

Click here to see some pictures.

http://antieviction.org.za/2010/07/07/solidarity-standing-with-the-poor-peoples-alliance-at-the-2010-us-social-forum

As the World Cup began in South Africa in June 2010, the social movements of the Poor People’s Alliance continue to face off against the governing elite’s escalation of harassment, repression, and displacement. At the same time, activists gathered at the second United States Social Forum — to bring together U.S.-based movements fighting poverty, racism and oppression, within the States as well as globally. Some of the poor people’s organizations that gathered in the embattled and resilient, majority-Black city of Detroit for the USSF had met with members of Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign who visited the U.S. in 2009, finding common cause and inspiration in their creative struggles and visions for a better world.

On June 25 in Detroit, members of the Chicago Anti-Eviction Campaign, Coalition of Immokalee Workers, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Picture the Homeless, Poverty Initiative, and other movement activists at the USSF gathered to play football — as a solidarity message to our allies in South Africa and their Poor People’s World Cup games happening at the same time.

We are with you! Aluta continua! Amandla Ngwethu!

For past examples of New York City-based solidarity statements and actions, see here and here.