Category Archives: creche

Sowetan: 100 shacks razed in fire

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2010/12/09/100-shacks-razed-in-fire

100 shacks razed in fire

Dec 9, 2010 | Elvis ka Nyelenzi

A RAGING shack fire burned about 100 shacks and a community crèche to the ground in Khayelitsha on Tuesday night.

This is the worst shack fire so far in Cape Town this summer and informal settlement residents fear that hundreds will have lost their homes by the end of the season.

Khayelitsha’s QQ Section crèche, built by the community more than two years ago, was destroyed. The only toilet in the settlement, a dry toilet bought by the community for the crèche for R3000 – was also destroyed.

Speaking to Sowetan after the fire, resident Mthobeli Qona said he called the nearest fire brigade, in Site C, Khayelitsha, as soon as the fire started, but they said they did not have water in their tanks.

“They said we must wait for another fire brigade from further away to come. It came after an hour, when all the shacks were burnt down. Everything is gone now.”

There are only five taps in the settlement of 5000 people and residents tried to stop the fire using buckets of water.

Qona hit out at the City of Cape Town, saying they had offered each family only eight wooden poles and five sheets of zinc to rebuild their shacks. “This is nothing,” Qona said.

Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape president Mzonke Poni, who built the community crèche in 2008, described the fire as “a direct result of the contempt in which the government holds the poor”.

Cape Argus: 100 homes razed as fire rips through Site B

http://www.capeargus.co.za/?fSectionId=3127&fArticleId=5760928

100 homes razed as fire rips through Site B
Sleeping seven-year-old girl dies in fire that razed her Valhalla Park wendy house this morning

December 08, 2010 Edition 2

JASON WARNER and |NATASHA PRINCE Staff Reporters

HUNDREDS of Khayelitsha residents have been left homeless after a fire ripped through the township, destroying nearly 100 shacks over the course of several hours.

Despite widespread damage, no injuries or deaths were reported.

But elsewhere, a seven-year-old girl died when the backyard wendy house in which she was sleeping, in Agnes Road, Valhalla Park, burned down today – with the house in front.

Officials said they suspected the fire had started in the wendy house and spread to the main house. It also damaged a neighbour’s house and wendy house. No other injuries were reported.

The girl’s parents are undergoing counselling.

Cape Town Fire and Rescue spokesman Theo Layne said the Khayelitsha fire had broken out at about 6.15pm yesterday in Khayelitsha’s QQ Section in Site B.

Six fire trucks and 34 firefighters were dispatched and it took them nearly five hours to bring the fire under control.

Today, several people began clearing the rubble and preparing to rebuild their homes.

Nomalizwo Mzamo, chairwoman of the QQ Section creche, inspected the charred remains of the cr?che this morning.

A visibly emotional Mzamo said she had no idea where the 82 children enrolled at the cr?che would go to today. “I am heartbroken,” she said.

Many of the families who had been preparing to go to the Eastern Cape for the holidays said they were devastated by the loss of the gifts they had planned to take along.

Mthobeli Qona, who is the deputy president of abaHlali Basemjondolo in the Western Cape and who lives in in QQ Section, said the fire had started at a corner shack near the neighbouring Q-Section from where many QQ-Section residents run electric cables from a junction.

Many residents believed the fire had been caused by an electrical fault, he said.

Another problem, Qona said, was that the nearest tap was “a distance” away from the area, preventing residents from dousing flames.

AbaHlali member Victor Leeuw, who helped fight the blaze, blamed the government’s lack of service delivery for the residents’ losses.

The informal settlement had been in existence for 24 years and its residents should have been relocated long ago, he said. People were using illegal electrical connections because the government refused to electrify the area, which lay under overhead power lines, Leeuw said.

Meanwhile, another fire broke out at a popular city nightclub yesterday afternoon.

Firefighters were called to the Vudu Lounge in Bree Street at 5.45pm. After almost two hours, the blaze was brought under control and no injuries were reported.

Yesterday the city praised firefighters for preventing Monday’s blaze on Signal Hill burning out of control.

“The city’s Fire and Rescue Services responded to a vegetation fire on the slopes of Signal Hill (on Monday) at 1.34pm. The fire raged in the area below the picnic and parking area on the top of Signal Hill, on the Sea Point side?

“Fire and Rescue Services had seven fire engines and three water tankers on scene and were assisted by two helicopters contracted to SANParks. The city’s firefighters were assisted on the ground by staff employed for the fire season, as well as by crews from SANParks and their contracted Working on Fire teams.

“Fire-fighting efforts were hampered by very strong wind conditions, difficult accessibility and a lack of water supply?”

Chief fire officer Ian Schnetler commended “staff, and the supporting agencies, on a job well done”.

Up To Five Hundred People Left Homeless in the QQ Fire Last Night

Wednesday, 08 December 2010
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Press Statement

Up To Five Hundred People Left Homeless in the QQ Fire Last Night

 




 

The fire that raged through the QQ Section shack settlement in Khayelitsha last night has destroyed up to 100 shacks leaving as many as 500 people homeless. Most people have lost everything including ID books, work clothes, school uniforms, medication and family photographs.

The community built and run crèche has also been destroyed.

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Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha

Update (9:12 p.m.): Between 50 & 100 shacks have been destroyed. The fire brigade arrived late – the media got there long before they did. The community is very angry.

Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Emergency Press Statement 07/12/2010

A terrible fire is currently raging in the QQ Section settlement in Khayelitsha. More than twenty homes and the community-built creche have already been destroyed. The fire is still raging.

Shack fires are not natural disasters. They are a direct result of the contempt in which the government holds the poor in this country. Shack fires are political.We will never accept that it is normal for the poor to burn.

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Opening ceremony for QQ Community creche

Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Statement:
31 July, 2008 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Khayelitsha – QQ Section, Abahlali baseMjondolo’s newest member community, has been one of the most deprived informal settlements in Cape Town: they have been waiting for services from government for the past 20 years. The last 14 years of ‘democracy’ has been meaningless to residents of QQ Section.

After living so many years without rudimentary services, abahlali (residents) find it very appalling for the City of Cape Town to claim that This City Works for You and the the Western Cape is a Home for All. They have sought to marginalise us and incited devisions between us so that we fight their ANC/DA political battles.

After many attempts by residents of QQ trying to force the City to provide them with basic services including mass-based protests, negotiations on good faith, and handing over of community-drafted memorandums, each endeavor has fallen on deaf ears.

So abahlali have decided to establish their own services owed to them by government. By donating R5 and R7 to erect their own crèche which will also double as a community hall, library and youth centre, as well as house the only toilet in the settlement, we are trying to prove that another world is possible.

On the 5th of July, 2008, residents of QQ took lead of launching the Western Cape branch of Abahlali baseMjondolo (Shackdwellers Movement) with the aim of uniting all shackdwellers in South Africa. Now, on the 2nd of August, 2008, the abahlali of QQ Section will have the ceremonial launch of their first self-financed community development project – the QQ Community crèche.

This crèche to be a community project owned by the people and not a non-governmental organisation controlled be a few self-electing board members. After a number of mass meetings, the newly elected Children’s Committee will be required to ensure that parents and other abahlali play a vital role in the success of this cooperative project. Also, after much discussion, residents agreed to a R50 per month fee for children attending the crèche. This community-owned project will seek the betterment of the entire community through volunteers helping out a few times a week and not a profit for any individual.

For further information, please feel free to contact Mzonke Poni at 073-256-2036 or qq.section@webmail.co.za