Category Archives: Democratic Left Front

DLF: Support the Umlazi Occupation

20 July 2012

PRESS STATEMENT: DLF CALLS FOR SOLIDARITY WITH THE OCCUPATION OF THE
ETHEKWINI MUNICIPAL OFFICE IN UMLAZI

In full solidarity with the organised and fighting community of the
Zakheleni shack settlement (in Ward 88 in Umlazi), the Democratic Left
Front (DLF) calls on all other poor communities, trade unions, people’s
organisations and activists in eThekwini to support the ongoing occupation
of municipal offices in Umlazi by the community. We call on progressive
organisations to send activists to be part of the occupation. We call for
support of the popular education activities taking place at the occupation.
We call for material support (food, tents, blankets and other basics) to
provide subsistence to the Zakheleni activists leading the occupation. We
call for support for the weekly People’s Assembly held at 11h00 every
Sunday. This Sunday’s People’s Assembly will prepare for the community
meeting with the eThekwini municipality planned for Monday next week.

The Zakheleni occupation has been ongoing since the beginning of last week.
Despite death threats and attacks by a local hit-squad, the community
daringly expressed their demands including that the useless ANC local ward
councilor, Nomzamo Mkhize, must be removed from her elected position.
Several comrades have also been threatened by this hit squad. Some have
been shot at and physically attacked. The UPM and the AbM are following up
these cases. This has included a Mandela Day protest which forced the
police to arrest some of the accused members of the hit squad. For the past
seven days of the occupation, many people have continued to ask Mkhize for
help and service. She has failed to respond to these requests. She is
disrespectful and people are asked to produce ANC membership cards in order
to get assistance from her.

At the various community assemblies held as part of the occupation, the
people of Zakheleni have resolved that “The Councillor’s office shall be
closed and a new People’s Office will be opened”. The community has also
consistently argued that “We are not interested in party political feuds,
but we are part society and all we need is development”.

The DLF also salutes the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM) and Abahlali
BaseMijondolo (AbM) for their effective organisation and leadership of the
Zakheleni community struggle. To add support political and organisational
support to the occupation, representatives of DLF-affiliated social
movements in Gauteng joined the occupation on Tuesday. These comrades
include Simphiwe Zwane (elected councilor representing the Operation
Khanyisa Movement in the City of Joburg, Siyabulela Faku (from the Vaal
Community Assembly), General Alfred Moyo (from the Makause Community
Development Forum) and Abraham Molati (from the Zandspruit Democratic Left
Society). The DLF is made up of various community organisations, social
movements, left groups and individual activists all united to build a broad
anti-capitalist front of solidarity, movement-building and struggle to win
poor and working people’s demands. We are united on struggles for universal
access to decommodified basic services, an end to unemployment, end to the
violence against women, and ecological justice.

*ENDS*

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:

Simphiwe Zwane (Operation Khanyisa Movement & Gauteng DLF) –

China Ngubane (DLF) – 072 651 9790

Bheki Buthelezi (UPM & DLF) – 072 639 9893

Mazibuko K. Jara (DLF) – 083 651 0271

DLF: Umlazi police shootings

Democratic Left Front Statement
26 June 2012

Umlazi police shootings

The Democratic Left Front (DLF) joins the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM) and Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) in condemning the South African Police Services for their callous act of shooting unarmed community activists in Umlazi earlier this evening. This shooting was not even triggered by any provocation of the police or any public violence whatsoever. The police shot three comrades of the UPM with live rounds as the community were dispersing from a mass community meeting. Even more worrying is that two of the injured comrades are missing. This raises serious concern about their security and well-being. The UPM has admirably sought emergency medical treatment for the one injured comrade who could be located.

An estimated 2,000 people had gathered at the local hall to discuss an intended peaceful occupation of the local ANC councillor’s office as part of the ongoing community struggles and demands for service delivery, jobs and access to land. Clearly, this is a case of sustained state repression against community protests and is a violation of basic rights to freedoms of assembly, speech and association.

In consultation with the community, the UPM and AbM, the DLF will seek legal advice and consider appropriate legal action as part of defensive measures whilst. The DLF calls on the Umlazi Ward 88 community, the UPM and AbM to remain united in their struggles for a decent life, and not to be intimated by police repression. Such sustained disciplined mass struggles are the ultimate key to win community demands as well as expose and defeat police repression.

ENDS

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:
Bheki Buthelezi (UPM & DLF) – 072 639 9893
Mazibuko K. Jara (DLF) – 083 651 0271
Athish Kirun (DLF) – 078 257 3764
Ayanda Kota (UPM & DLF) – 078 625 6462
Mnikelo Ndabankulu (AbM) – 081 309 5485
China Ngubane (DLF & Right to Know Campaign) – 072 651 9790

DLF: Bheki Buthelezi Appears in Court Today & 18 Other UPM Activists Arrested for Public Violence

Democratic Left Front
25 June 2012

PRESS STATEMENT: BHEKI BUTHELEZI APPEARS IN COURT TODAY & 18 OTHER UPM
ACTIVISTS ARRESTED FOR PUBLIC VIOLENCE

The Democratic Left Front (DLF) calls for solidarity with Bheki Buthelezi
and 18 others, some of whom are members of the Unemployed People’s Movement
(UPM), when they appear at 09h00 at the Umlazi Magistrate’s Court.
Buthelezi will face charges of intimidation. The others were arrested
around 11pm on Saturday evening ostensibly on charges of public violence. Some
of the 18 have been involved in community protests over service delivery
while others have not. Buthelezi was released from police custody on
Saturday evening after sustained community occupation and pressure on the
Umlazi Police Station Commander. Abahlali BaseMijondolo, the South Durban
Community Environment Alliance, the KZN Right To Know Campaign, the
Clairwood Community Forum, the Durban Social Forum and the DLF will all
join the 19 comrades and the local community at the court this morning.

All these charges relate to sustained mass action by the community of
Section S in Umlazi (Ward 88, eThekwini Municipality). This community has
suffered for more than 6 years at the hands of unaccountable ANC councilors
and a local municipality that has failed to deliver services and provide
employment through local economic development. On more than three
occasions, the community has demanded that the municipality must recall
councillor Nomzamo Mkhize as she has not fulfilled her duties including a
failure to call a single ward meeting to discuss community issues. Instead,
she has worked on a factional basis selecting who to meet with in the
community and she has ignored several community calls and requests for
meetings. The municipality has failed to provide electricity, water,
sanitation, housing and paving. The community has also demanded that the
municipality must call a ward general meeting where it must be transparent
about, and allow for bottom-up community participation in the municipal
budget and development plans. The community has also demanded that the old
Airport space be allocated for food sovereignty and housing. The community
has done everything to ensure that these demands are heard. But at every
instance the local municipality has equivocated and responded with
increasing repression. It was at this point that the community decided on
the peaceful occupation of local municipal offices that the police were
activated to arrest Buthelezi first and then the other 18 activists. What
more must the community do to live decently as promised by the South
African Constitution?

The DLF reiterates its call for the dropping of the charges against
Buthelezi and the 18. The police have no evidence against any of them. In
fact, the charges are instigated by repressive intentions given the
sustained mass struggles in the community. The DLF calls on the South
African Human Rights Commission to investigate the police violations of the
rights to protest by using the arrest of community activists.

ENDS

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:

Bheki Buthelezi (UPM & DLF) – 072 639 9893

Mazibuko K. Jara (DLF) – 083 651 0271

Athish Kirun (DLF) – 078 257 3764

Ayanda Kota (UPM & DLF) – 078 625 6462

Mnikelo Ndabankulu (AbM) – 081 309 5485

China Ngubane (DLF & Right to Know Campaign) – 072 651 9790

DLF Calls for Immediate Release of Bheki Buthelezi

DEMOCRATIC LEFT FRONT
23 June 2012

PRESS STATEMENT: DLF CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE OF BHEKI BUTHELEZI

The Democratic Left Front (DLF) calls on the South African Police Services
to release Bheki Buthelezi with immediate effect. Buthelezi, a leader and
activist of the Unemployed People’s Movement (UPM) and the DLF, was
arrested earlier this morning at his Umlazi home in Durban. The SAPS
falsely accused him of intimidating the local ANC councilor. This follows
Buthelezi’s role as a key leader and organiser of sustained struggles for
service delivery and housing by the residents of Ward 88 in Umlazi. These
struggles culminated in a community march held on 08 June 2012. In
addition, the community had recently put forward demands for access to land
for food gardens and other community development initiatives. During his
arrest, the SAPS expressly told Buthelezi to withdraw from his activism
against the ANC-led municipality. They also instructed him to block a mass
meeting which was scheduled for this morning by Abahlali baseMijondolo
(AbM). As a matter of principle, Buthelezi correctly refused to do so. He
pointed out to the SAPS that the only way for the struggles and meetings to
stop is through government meeting the needs and demands of the community. *

The DLF expresses its full solidarity with the people of Ward 88 in Umlazi,
the UPM and AbM as they now plan to visit the Umlazi Police Station and
meet the Station Commander. The UPM and AbM are also organising legal
representation for Buthelezi. The DLF calls on all progressive
organisations and activists to condemn Buthelezi’s arrest and call for his
release. Letters of protest may be sent to the Umlazi Police Station to the
Station Commander: Brigadier M.E. Zondi at fax number: 031 918 8185, and
via sms on 082 331 9650.

Buthelezi’s arrest is part of the state’s increasing use of repression and
excessive force against social dissent and community protests. This is
increasingly so as the neoliberal ANC state continues to fail to transform
South Africa. It was the same repression that led the Durban ANC to
collaborate with the SAPS to hound the AbM out of Kennedy Road. It was the
same ANCYL members attacked DL and UPM activists at the international day
of climate action during the COP17 conference in December 2011. This had
been done earlier in August 2011 when the Operation Khanyisa Movement’s
sole councilor in the City of Joburg and DLF activist, Simphiwe Zwane, was
arrested for leading community struggles against poor service delivery in
Thembelihle. At its most tragic, this sustained repression led to the
killing of Andries Tatane by the SAPS during a protest in Meqheleng in
April last year. All this reminiscent of the old apartheid police style
tactics to suppress dissent and maintain social control. Taken as a whole,
it is clear that there has been widespread intimidation of people wishing
to take up their constitutional right to protest, and that this threatens
our hard-won democracy. The DLF is extremely concerned about the sustained
actions of Jacob Zuma’s ruling elite to enhance the coercive capacities of
the state.

ENDS

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:

Mazibuko K. Jara (DLF) – 083 651 0271

Athish Kirun (DLF) – 078 257 3764

Ayanda Kota (UPM & DLF) – 078 625 6462

Mnikelo Ndabankulu (AbM) – 081 309 5485

DLF Statement on the Arrest and Assault of Ayanda Kota

DEMOCRATIC LEFT FRONT

13 January 2012

PRESS STATEMENT: DROP CHARGES AGAINST AYANDA KOTA AND CALL FOR PUBLIC ACTIONS AGAINST STATE/POLICE REPRESSION OF ACTIVISTS

The Democratic Left Front (DLF) calls for the immediate release and dropping of all charges against comrade Ayanda Kota, the Chairperson of the Grahamstown-based Unemployed People’s Movement. Kota is also a founder and member of the National Committee of the (DLF). Kota will appear at 9am this morning at the Grahamstown Magistrate’s Court to answer to charges of theft and assault of police. He has been in police custody from yesterday afternoon.

According to a UPM press statement issued yesterday, a certain Constable Zulu and other members of the South African Police Services (SAPS) savagely assaulted Kota at the Grahamstown police station. This assault took place in front of several witnesses including Kota’s 6-year old son. Kota was at the police station in response to charges laid against him by a controversial academic from Rhodes University. Ostensibly, Kota had not been returned a book he had borrowed from this academic. She then proceeded to lay a charge of theft against her. The police added the assault charge.

As stated in separate statements by the UPM and by the Rhodes University-based Students for Social Justice (SSJ), Kota’s treatment at the police station is consistent with increasing police repression against activists of social movements involved in social mobilisation challenging the neo-liberal and anti-poor policies of the ANC-led state. As the SSJ statement said “We have seen this behavior in Durban, when the ANC led an attack against Abahlali basemjondolo members in the Kennedy Road Settlement. We have seen this behavior when ANCYL members attacked DL and UPM activists (including Ayanda) at the international day of climate action during COP 17. We have seen this behavior when Rehad Desai was assaulted in front of Zuma”. At its most tragic, this led to the killing of Andries Tatane by the SAPS during a protest in Meqheleng in April last year.

The state’s increasing use of excessive force is reminiscent of the old apartheid police style tactics to suppress dissent and maintain social control. The more than 50 social movements that mobilise under the DLF umbrella have a list of at least 14 others whose deaths have been reported in the media since 2000 (seven of whom had their lives ended in 2010 and 2011). In addition, a much greater number of people have been traumatised by the use of rubber bullets fired at point blank range, and by improper use of live rounds, tear gas and water cannon. Taken as a whole, it is clear that there has been widespread intimidation of people wishing to take up their constitutional right to protest, and that this threatens our hard-won democracy. The DLF is extremely concerned about the sustained actions of Jacob Zuma’s ruling elite to enhance the coercive capacities of the state.

The DLF is not surprised by yesterday’s actions of the SAPS against Kota. For a number of months now, Kota has reported suspected surveillance of his movements and family home by the local SAPS. The DLF also recalls that over the last two years, several UPM activists including Kota have been subject to problematic arrests, false charges, intimidation and harassment from the local SAPS. These SAPS actions were in cahoots with local ANC politicians and councilors following sustained UPM social mobilisation in support of demands for service delivery and accountability by the Makana Local Municipality which is mired in inefficiency, failed service delivery and corruption.

The DLF strongly condemns the SAPS for its treatment of Kota. This attack on Kota is an attack on constitutionally protected human rights and the very essence of democracy itself. This attack is an attack on social movements and the DLF itself. No amount of police brutality will solve the mass misery and poverty inflicted on our people by the pro-capitalist ANC government. This attack is a direct call to all poor and working people to intensify their actions of disciplined social protest and mobilisation against the anti-poor policies of the ANC government and municipalities as well as against police brutality.

For all the above reasons, the DLF endorses the SSJ call for an investigation of, and action against those SAPS members responsible for yesterday’s assault on Kota. We also join the UPM and SSJ call on the Makana municipality and the ANC to condemn this action against Kota in the strongest possible terms.

This is the time to mobilise affected communities and organisations to bring evidence of police brutality into the public sphere. Poor and working people subjected to police brutality and other repressive action must be able to speak out and act on the violations of their rights. Such action must also send a strong signal to the Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD), the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) and the Public Protector to undertake official investigations in terms of their constitutional and legislated mandates on cases of police violence directed at citizens engaged in protests. The DLF calls on the ICD, the SAHRC and the Public Protector to undertake statutory investigations of police brutality in a responsive and pro-active way that can also ensure that police brutality is exposed and declared a violation of, and a crime against the constitutional rights to speak and associate freely.

Beyond what these statutory institutions can do, the DLF also reiterates another call it made last year: the call for a People’s Tribunal Against Police Brutality. In the view of the DLF, such a Tribunal must hear evidence from affected communities, thus providing a voice for working class experience and anger whilst also building solidarity between organised workers, poor communities and others committed to human rights, social justice and freedom of expression. Such a Tribunal can also lay the foundation for a mass campaign that can mobilise poor and working people to speak out and act against police brutaliy, and challenge the increased militarisation and centralisation of power in an increasingly unaccountable security cluster of the state.

Finally, the DLF is extremely concerned at the failure of the Rhodes academic to take political responsibility for her action to lay charges against Kota. No matter whatever unhappiness and ill-feeling she has against Kota she is a politically mature and experienced enough individual who knows the struggles of the UPM and its harassment by the local SAPS. We are however not surprised by her actions as she has sustained an almost sadistic individual campaign against the UPM ever since it did not agree with her political views regarding participation in the May local government elections. Yesterday afternoon, our comrade Jane Duncan (a DLF national committee member and fellow academic at Rhodes University) spoke to this academic to no avail. In our engagement with her, it became clear that the actions of this individual unwittingly aid the efforts of the local ANC and SAPS to demonise Kota and his other UPM comrades. None of this will take UPM attention away from its programme of action.

ENDS

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:

DLF Spokespersons:

Brian Ashley – 082 085 0788

Mazibuko K. Jara – 083 651 0271

Vishwas Satgar – 082 775 3420

Website – www.democraticleft.za.net

SSJ: Benjamin Fogel, 071 224 6524

UPM: Xola Mali, 072 299 5253