Category Archives: fires

Shack fires are our daily lives

23 October 2018
Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Statement

Shack fires are our daily lives

When you live in a shack in this country you are considered to be someone who cannot think. Your dignity is not recognised. You are left to live with the rats and the floods. You are left to burn. Your life does not count as a human life.

Almost 25 years after apartheid we are still condemned to indignity. We are still forced to live like pigs in the mud. We are still sentenced to die in the fires. When we refuse indignity and stand up for our humanity we continue to face arrest, assault, torture and assassination.  Continue reading

Sunday Times: Cape Town fires kill man, over 100 people left homeless

http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/2013/05/12/cape-town-fires-kill-man-over-100-people-left-homeless

Cape Town fires kill man, over 100 people left homeless

The city’s disaster management spokesman Wilfred Solomons-Johannes said the body of the 33-year-old man was found after firefighters quelled the blaze at the Siyahlala informal settlement.

He said the cause of the fire was not known, but police were investigating the matter.

Earlier in the day, another fire was reported at the same informal settlement, that left 105 people homeless.

The inferno destroyed 26 shacks.

On Saturday night, at least five shacks burnt down, leaving about 20 people displaced in other informal settlements around the city.

Solomons-Johannes said firefighters across the city were called to battle at least six incidents at the weekend.

“The city’s disaster response will… assist the affected households with the supply of food parcels, blankets, baby packs, clothing and building material, including trauma counselling to the family of the deceased person,” he said.

‘Slum Eradication’ is not the answer to the housing crisis in Durban

Click here to read the article published in The Mercury

‘Slum Eradication’ is not the answer to the housing crisis in Durban

Richard

In a recent interview in The Mercury the new City Manager in Durban, S’bu Sithole, declared that ‘slums’ would be ‘eradicated’ in the city by 2030. Sithole seems sincere and well intentioned and some of his comments on housing, such as those pertaining to private profiteering off public housing, and the low quality of public housing are most welcome. But the return to the language of ‘eradicating slums’ is cause for concern. We’ve been down this road before and it was a disaster.

In 2001 Thabo Mbeki announced that ‘slums’ would be ‘eradicated’ in South Africa by 2014 and in that same year the eThekweni Municipality launched its ‘slum clearance programme’. By 2006 officials and politicians in Durban, and in the province, were confidently declaring that there would be no shacks in KwaZulu-Natal by 2010. The date by which shacks were going to be ‘eradicated’ was then shifted to 2011, and then aligned with the national target date of 2014.

But the idea that shacks can be eradicated by a certain date because a politician or official has decided this is a fantasy and one that is predicated on a denial of the seriousness of our urban crisis. The reality is that we have an economy that makes it impossible for millions of people to access housing via the market and that the number of people who can’t access housing via the market is growing at a rate that far outstrips the state’s ability to provide houses. The situation is compounded by the fact that many of the houses built by the state are, as well as being tiny and very badly constructed, so far away from opportunities to access work, schooling and so on that living in state housing is simply not viable for many people. Many people are much better off in well located shacks than in housing developments in the middle of nowhere.

In recent years both the eThekweni Municipality and the new Minister of Housing, Tokyo Sexwale, have publicly admitted that there is no chance of ‘eradication’ by 2014 and the language of ‘eradication’ is no longer promoted at national level. This is a welcome development because it shifts the discussion about the housing crisis off the terrain of fantasy and back on to the terrain of reality. But the problem with the rhetoric around ‘slum clearance’ was not just that it is, under current realities, a fantasy and a form of denialism. It also led to all kinds of other problems most of which come down to the fact that progress was assessed by the statistical measure of how many shacks were knocked down and how many houses were erected rather than how the City’s approach to housing affected the lives of people.

People were often left homeless when their shacks were demolished. And the City often acted with violence and in systemic violation of the laws that protect people against arbitrary eviction when it demolished shacks. People were also often subject to forced removals to transit camps or government houses which were sometimes structurally worse than their shacks and which often took them far away from social networks and opportunities to sustain livelihoods and access to education. For some people ‘housing delivery’ was, in fact, a disaster. Moreover the fantasy that all shack settlements were now ‘temporary’ meant that very little support was provided to shack settlements in terms of essential, and at times life-saving, services. The results of this included regular fires, children dying of diarrhoea and women without access to toilets risking rape when finding a private place to go to relieve themselves at night.

Unsurprisingly the city’s ‘slum clearance’ programme led to international condemnation from human rights organisations and sustained popular opposition from shack dwellers. The response of the City often took the form of outright repression including unlawful bans on protests, violent police responses to peaceful protests and violent attacks on individual activists by both the police and party structures. And Mike Sutcliffe’s substitution of spin and authoritarian bluster for open and rational engagement was a corrosive force in our public sphere.

However many grassroots activists, as well as many people working in the City, felt that the appointment of James Nxumalo as the new mayor marked the real possibility that a new start could be made in Durban. Nxumalo was seen as someone who was willing to engage, who treated poor people with respect and who could shift the discussion of the problems that we confront in Durban on to the terrain of reason and into a mode of partnership, or at least productive engagement, between poor communities and poor people’s organisations and the City.

The reality is that most of the forces that are driving the growth in squatting around the country are global and national and are outside of the control of any Mayor, City Manager or Municipality. But there are valuable things, even within current budgetary and policy constraints, that the eThekwini Municipality can do, and do very quickly, to seriously improve the lives of shack dwellers in Durban.

For instance immediate steps can be taken to urgently provide services like adequate and properly maintained water, sanitation, foot paths, access roads for emergency vehicles, fire extinguishers as well as electricity to shack settlements. It’s also possible for officials to take immediate steps to stop the farce that consulting with local party structures, or in the case of Motala Heights a local businessman who is widely referred to as a ‘gangster’ and whose taste for thuggery is well known, is the same thing as consulting with the people that are actually effected by decisions around development.

The City could also take urgent action to provide subsidised transport from the peripheral housing developments in places like Parkgate, Welbedacht and Waterloo, to fix up the houses in these areas and to provide other facilities, like parks and libraries in these barren spaces. The return to the apartheid strategy of forcing people into transit camps can also be halted, immediately, and adequate housing sought, with urgency, for all people that have been pushed into these inhuman spaces. And of course decisive action can be taken against corruption. Poor people’s organisations can be brought into planning processes and there is also nothing stopping the City from making a serious commitment to operating within the law. Moreover a serious attempt could be made to access resources, provided for in the Breaking New Ground policy, that, where possible, encourages the progressive and participatory upgrading of shack settlements into formal houses where they are rather than forced removals to peripheral ghettos.

But the most important shift that has to take place is that our urban crisis needs to be seen through the lens of an urgent imperative for justice rather than, as so often happened under Sutcliffe’s brutal reign, in terms of the language of security or making Durban more attractive to investors and its wealthier residents. We need to oppose any attempt to present the urban poor as a threat to society and to recognise, as the shack dweller’s movement Abahlali baseMjondolo has always insisted, that the same history and the same economy that has made some of us rich has made others of us poor. The Municipality should, as an urgent priority, be offering maximum support to the city’s poorest residents in ways that will result in the maximum improvement to their lives. This is the commitment that we need to be hearing. A return to the ‘eradication’ agenda will take us back to the numbers game that has very little regard for the lives of the people behind the statistics.

Mercury: Four arrested over shack building material

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4985930

Four arrested over shack building material

May 18, 2009 Edition 1

NOMPUMELELO MAGWAZA

FOUR people were arrested in Durban yesterday after they were found in possession of suspected stolen building material.

Sydenham police Superintendent Glen Nayager said that residents from the Foreman Road informal settlement had notified officers that the material, which was intended for the reconstruction of burnt shacks, was being stolen.

He said the police had watched the area and four men travelling in a bakkie with the building material were arrested yesterday.

“They were taken to Sydenham police station and were later charged with being in possession of suspected stolen material,” said Nayager.

Foreman Road ANC chairwoman Patricia Mjoli, however, denied that the material had been stolen. She said the remaining material had been stored in some of the rebuilt shacks by the Foreman Road ANC committee for safety.

“I was one of the people asked by the committee to store doors and window frames. The committee had decided to remove the material to a safe place this morning (yesterday), but they left some in our shacks. Then people stormed into my shack, demanding the material, and I was afraid that they would hurt me.”

Mjoli, who was not among those arrested yesterday, said she had been accused by locals of stealing building material that belonged to the settlement’s residents. She could not explain why it had not been used and had been stored.

Nayager said the police had been called to the settlement to break up fights between residents later in the day.

“People’s houses had been broken into after others found building material inside their newly built shacks. We had to break up fights and we used stun grenades to disperse the residents. Some people were taken in for questioning,” he said.

He said police were monitoring the area and would be there for the night.

Daily News: Careless council moves have led to shack fires

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4627067

Opinion
Careless council moves have led to shack fires
The adoption of the Slums Clearance Programme in 2001 has denied provision of basic services to our shackland dwellers

September 24, 2008 Edition 1

Imraan Buccus

Little more than a week ago, almost the entire Foreman Road shack settlement in Clare Estate burnt down, leaving thousands destitute. The next morning residents found a body in the ashes. There had also been a devastating fire in the same settlement last year. The photographs of the morning after are apocalyptic.

The nearby Kennedy Road settlement has had seven major fires this year. Just a few weeks ago eight people, including five children, were burnt to death in a shack fire in Cato Crest. My family, as well as most Daily News readers, I am sure, were deeply shocked to read about these fires from the comfort of our sturdy homes.

A recent Abahlali baseMjondolo report written by Robert Neuwirth, an American journalist who lived in shack settlements in Rio, Bombay, Nairobi and Istanbul while researching his celebrated book Shadow Cities, shows that on an average day there are 10 shacks fires in South Africa. In Durban there is an average of one shack fire a day.

Shack fires put young children and old and disabled people at particular risk, results in the loss of ID books and school uniforms, and render the already poor destitute. They create acute stress for children, many of whom are tortured by recurring nightmares about the fires. Some lose their HIV medication and getting more can be almost impossible.

Here in Durban from 1990 until the city adopted its controversial Slums Clearance programme in 2001, serious attempts were made to provide life saving basic services to shack settlements. But after the adoption of the Slums Clearance programme all shack settlements were instantly deemed “temporary” and the provision of basic services was largely stopped.

But a bureaucratic decision to declare shacks temporary does not make them go away. People now just have to live in them without enough toilets, taps, paths, drains and so on. The decision to stop the provision of basic services is a key cause of the fires and a key cause of the difficulty that residents have in fighting the fires.

One of the services that was withdrawn for shack settlements after 2001 was electricity, and there is a direct link between the fires and the city’s decision in 2001 to cease the provision of electricity to shack dwellers.

Cramped

When people are cramped into one-roomed shacks with walls of plastic and cardboard, the smallest accident with a candle or paraffin stove can result in thousands losing everything in a matter of minutes. Everyone seems to agree that the fire brigade does a good job once the firefighters reach the scene.

But shack fires spread quickly and it is impossible for people to fight a fire effectively if, as in Foreman Road, there is only one tap in the whole settlement. Despite the very high risk of fire in shack settlements, the city does not provide residents with fire extinguishers. This is unacceptable.

There is a direct connection between the failure to provide basic services to shack settlements and the regular and often catastrophic fires.

If we are to have any claim to be a caring city the decision to cease the provision of life-saving basic services to shack settlements must be reconsidered with maximum urgency. In fact, given the stress that the constitution puts on the right to life and the rights of the child, it is probably unlawful.

The whole policy of slum clearance is fundamentally misguided. This was the policy of apartheid and of other authoritarian regimes like the dictatorship that ran Brazil in the 1970s. These policies have never worked and are now entirely discredited internationally. The reason why they fail is that they see shacks, rather than the housing crisis, as the problem. They fail to understand that shacks are poor people’s solution to the housing crisis. Neither knocking down shacks nor forcibly removing people to out-of-town housing developments is a viable solution to the housing crisis. In fact, both approaches just make the housing crisis worse.

These days the progressive policies that have been developed in countries like Brazil and the Philippines are not about eradicating or clearing slums but instead seek to support shack settlements so that they can develop into viable communities with decent conditions. The first step is to secure tenure for residents so that there is no threat of eviction, the next is to provide basic services and the third is to formalise the housing.

But in South Africa we are making two fundamental mistakes. The first is that our only focus is on building houses and this means that we leave people in the most appalling and insecure conditions while they wait for housing. The second is that much of the housing being provided is, as under apartheid, being built on the periphery of the cities where people simply cannot survive.

We have failed to understand that where people live is sometimes more important to them than the structure in which they live. We have also failed to understand that housing rights are not just about access to a physical structure – they are about things like tenure security and access to basic services.

We cannot continue with a situation where to be poor in Durban means that your home will be burnt down again and again and again. We need decisive action to stop the relentless fires devastating the poorest communities in our city.

# Imraan Buccus is a university-based researcher and contributing author to African Politics – Beyond the Third Wave of Democratisation – Juta Press (2008)