Category Archives: Daily News

Daily News: ‘Give us houses not meat’

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/give-us-houses-not-meat-mayor-1.1598490#.Um8t9PnI3UU

By BHEKI MBANJWA

'We want houses not meat'

Durban – Politicans are not welcome in Durban’s informal settlements until such time that the housing needs of the poor are addressed, Abahlali baseMjondolo, the shack dwellers’ movement, has declared.

“The shack dwellers are sick and tired of the lies that we have been getting from our politicians and we have to send a message that they are not wanted in our areas,” said Bandile Mdlalose, the movement’s general secretary.

She was responding to questions after residents of Kennedy Road protested by blockading roads on Saturday over a visit to the settlement by eThekwini mayor James Nxumalo.

Continue reading

Daily News: Rights group members freed

http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/news/rights-group-members-freed-1.1589819#.Ule701DI3UV


ND UMLAZI COURT1

INLSA

 

 

 

The three Abahlali BaseMjondolo members who were arrested during one of the many service delivery protests in eThekwini, have been released on warning by the Umlazi Magistrate’s Court.

Themba Msomi, Thembeka Sondaba and Fikiswa Mgoduka were among a group of protesters arrested on Friday and charged with public violence.

On Monday eight branches of the shack dwellers movement – including Clare Estate, Isipingo, Mayville, Shallcross, Siyanda and Umlazi – organised road blockades in various areas.

The protests were against evictions, arrests of their members and to demand housing.

Abahlali and Cato Crest residents have been in and out of court trying to prevent the city from tearing down their shacks.

They have applied for a contempt of court order against the city for ignoring previous interdicts restraining it from demolishing shacks.

There was a strong police presence at the court on Wednesday as Abahlali members protested outside the court gates.

The three are expected to return to court on October 23.

The movement’s secretary, Bandile Mdlalose, was released on R5 000 bail on Monday after spending seven days in custody. She is due back in court on October 28.

Meanwhile, support for Abahlali has grown.

The KwaZulu-Natal Church Leaders’ Group denounced the actions of the municipality and its failure in providing “the most basic necessities”.

The chairman of the group and Dean of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, Bishop Rubin Philip, said adequate housing was a human- and God-given right.

“The court keeps giving interdicts to protect these people, but local authorities seem to neglect authority and the rules of the court,” he said.

Philip, who was part of the Black Consciousness Movement, said the poor treatment of shackdwellers was deeply disappointing.

“It’s like taking a step back into apartheid. This is not what we fought for. We fought for peace, homes, jobs and for freedom,” he said.

He said that the church had opened its doors in case the movement required legal assistance through the church’s independent organisation, the Church Land Programme.

The group accused the city leadership of short-sightedness and dishonesty in its handling of housing, which it said sacrificed the lives of the poor to feed selfish political ends.

Last month the general council of the Bar of South Africa criticised the municipality for sending its land invasion unit to destroy shacks despite interdicts preventing this.

The city has insisted that it has been acting within the law. Houses were being built, but it took time and a process had to be followed.

Mayor James Nxumalo will brief the media on Thursday on the city’s housing programme and to “clarify issues surrounding the Cato Crest unrest and land invasions”.

Nxumalo said the city would be “clearing the misconceptions regarding the court order and demolition of shacks”.

Note: The City cancelled their press conference at the last minute.

Daily News: Two shot outside uMlazi court

Once again when unarmed protesters are attacked by armed force under the direction of the state – be it the police, the Land Invasions Unit or private security gaurds (in this case Fidentia Security) the victims of state violence are automatically presented as 'violent' in the media while state violence is not presented as violence. What happened here is that AbM supproters were prevented from entering the court to witness the bail hearing. An attempt (unarmed) was made to enter the court. At this point Nyathi was attacked and shot by a security gaurd. Two shots were fired by the guard and one of the bullets ricocheted and hit the security gaurd in the hand. After Nyathi was shot he was severely beaten by the SAPS and then he was charged with assault and placed under police gaurd in hospital. As far as we know the security guard who shot an unarmed man in the court and the police who then beat an injured man have not had any charges bought against them. 

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/two-shot-outside-umlazi-court-1.1588872#.UlY07FDI3UU

October 8 2013 at 02:33pm 

By SIHLE MLAMBO

Durban – A security guard and a supporter of the Abahlali baseMjondolo shack dwellers’ association were shot during violent protests outside the uMlazi Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

Abahlali members Themba Msomi, Thembeka Sondaba and Fikiswa Mgoduka appeared in court on public violence charges.

They had been arrested by police in uMlazi on Friday for allegedly blockading the Griffiths Mxenge (Prince Mangosuthu Highway) in uMlazi with burning tyres and debris.

The three accused are expected to appear in court again on Tuesday for a bail application.

The security guard and the wounded supporter were taken to the Prince Mshiyeni Memorial Hospital in uMlazi.

The supporter is under police guard at the hospital.

Continue reading

Daily News: Mom cries as shack woman is held

Emotions were running very high after the illegal evictions, two assasinations, the murder of Nqobile Nzuza and the blatantly political arrest and denial of bail to Bandile Mdlalose.

http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/news/mom-cries-as-shack-woman-is-held-1.1586019#.Uk2qRYbI2VI

By Nkululeko Nene

Durban – Abahlali baseMjondolo spokeswoman, Bandile Mdlalose, who is accused of causing public violence during a protest in Cato Manor, must spend a week in custody – her bail application has been adjourned until Monday.

Members of the shack dwellers’ movement who were at the Durban Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday shouted in dismay when magistrate Vanitha Armu announced her decision.

The crowd refused to leave the court when the court interpreter pleaded with them to go. They threatened her, saying she did not live in the building and would have to walk out after work.

Mdlalose’s mother, Busisiwe, cried hysterically inside court as she watched her daughter being led away to the court cells.

“I do not feel okay. I am very worried about her state of health.

Continue reading

Daily News: Shack dwellers claim victory

Daily News: Shack dwellers claim victory

Submitted by Abahlali_3 on Wed, 2013-09-18 02:35. cato crest | court | Daily News | Noelene Barbeau
http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/news/shack-dwellers-claim-victory-1.1577265#.UjkQZtLTx34

Shack dwellers claim victory

September 13 2013 at 11:54am
By NOELENE BARBEAU

Just one day before the city was to have shown why it was not in contempt of a court order preventing the demolition of shacks at a Durban settlement, it tore down more.

Now the eThekwini Municipality, in the latest action against it by the shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali BaseMjondolo, has been ordered to identify and mark the homes of 30 residents at the Cato Crest informal settlement to ensure they are not demolished again.

Abahlali is claiming the draft order granted by Durban High Court Judge Yvonne Mbatha on Thursday as another legal victory in its protracted fight with the city.

Last week, the movement and the 30 shack dwellers were in court asking that it hold the municipality, its Land Invasion Unit and city manager S’bu Sithole to be in contempt of an earlier order and for the officials to be jailed for 30 days.

They claimed shack dwellers were being evicted, in spite of a September 2 order that prevented the city from demolishing the 30 applicants’ homes and from evicting them.

Abahlali and the residents first went to court on August 22 after some Cato Crest shacks were demolished. An interdict was granted then preventing further demolition.

Last week, the court gave respondents until Thursday to show why it should not be held in contempt but before they could respond, Abahlali’s lawyer handed in a supplementary affidavit saying the city had “wilfully disregarded” the court order by demolishing 28 shacks on Tuesday. It said 15 of the shacks belonged to applicants.

In their answering affidavit filed on Thursday, the respondents said they were merely complying with a high court order secured by the MEC for Human Settlements and Public Works in March to prevent the illegal large-scale invasion of land in Cato Manor.

The municipality denied it was in contempt, saying that an undertaking made last month did not apply to any structures the applicants would have erected following the granting of the order.

It said 25 structures it had torn down last month were on land owned by the departments of Human Settlements and Public Works and the action was to prevent illegal invasion and occupation.

The municipality said its Land Invasion Unit had demolished eight fully built and 10 half-built structures on September 2, and 10 fully built and 13 half-built structures three days later.

It claimed the structures were not occupied and that it would not tear down shacks that were occupied.

The court on Thursday adjourned both the main application and contempt application without assigning a date.

In the meantime, the draft order states the municipality would have to meet the 30 shack dwellers on Tuesday, so that their homes could be marked to prevent demolition.

Those applicants whose homes were destroyed were allowed to rebuild them and those would also be marked.