Category Archives: grassroots urban planning

Papers by Marcelo Lopes de Souza

1. Together with the state, despite the state, against the state: Social movements as ‘critical urban planning’ agents, 2006
2. Social movements in the face of criminal power, 2009
3. Cities for people, not for profit—from a radical-libertarian and Latin American perspective, 2010
4. Which right to which city? In defence of political-strategic clarity, 2010
5. A (Very Short) Tale of Two Urban Forums, 2010
6. Urban Development on the Basis of Autonomy: A Politico-philosophical and Ethical Framework for Urban Planning and Management, 2010
7. Marxists, libertarians and the city, 2012
8. NGOs and social movements: Convergences and divergences, 2013

Cape Argus: Backyard dwellers take over land

http://www.khayelitshastruggles.com/2009/05/backyard-dwellers-take-over-land.html

Backyard dwellers take over land
May 15 2009 at 01:56PM

By Francis Hweshe and Molly Raisch

About a thousand disgruntled backyard dwellers in Macassar Village, in the Strand, are set to butt heads with the City of Cape Town after they decided to illegally clear and occupy a piece of land on the margins of the N2.

The city has threatened to seek a court interdict against them if they do not halt the operation.

The backyard dwellers, part of housing lobby group, Abahlali baseMjondolo, said their patience with the government on housing delivery had “run dry”.

They also said that they were “tired of paying rent”.

A Cape Argus team visited the area yesterday and saw women, some with children in tow, and men busy at work cutting bushes with machetes, saws and spades.

The group’s spokeswoman, Ronell Muller, first downplayed the land invasion, saying that they were clearing the land in order to host games for backyard dwellers at the weekend.

“We will see what happens after the games,” she said.

Pressed to clarify her response, she said: “If they are open spaces why not allow people to build houses.”

Muller, who is a mother of two, said she was retrenched last year and was now failing to pay rent and struggled to send her children to school.

“Some of the people here have been waiting for houses for more than 20 years,” she said.

Diniwe Xhakwe agreed.

“We don’t have any place to stay.

“Unemployment here is high and we are still waiting for houses,” said Xhakwe, a mother of three, who is also taking care of her late sister’s two children.

Xhakwe, unemployed, said they were “not doing this (taking the land) by force”.

She said “tough circumstances” had pushed them over the edge.

Jeffrey le Roux, a father of two, said the group had lost patience with government.

“Every time they tell us to come for housing in three or five years time. I have been renting for 10 years,” he said.

Le Roux said his family survived on his R960 disability grant, which barely covered bills and food.

Vusimuzi Sihamba, 29, said: “I want to build my house here.”

In a statement, the group said it would continue with its “cleaning campaign on the land that we have identified ourselves until Friday (today).”

Steve Hayward, head of the city’s anti-land invasion unit, said the land had been reserved for a housing development for those on the waiting list.

He said development on the land were set to start in the next two years.

“We have zero tolerance towards land invasion,” he said.

“We won’t allow the Johnnies-come-lately to occupy the land.”

o This article was originally published on page 8 of Cape Argus on May 15, 2009

AbM Cape Town: Tomorrow raining or not we continue with our protest

http://www.khayelitshastruggles.com

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Macassar Clean Up Campaign Continues

The second day of the cleaning campaign on our land in Macassar was even more successful than the first. The police ceased more or less from their intimidatory tactics and there were even more community members present to clean the land

At six in the evening the community met on the land to plan for the intended picnic and sports event on Saturday. To everyone’s surprise, a municipal bakkie came and parked itself near us in the middle of the meeting. Then a young man and woman got out of the bakkie, with the woman claiming she was from the City of Cape Town’s “Anti-Land Invasion Unit.” She asked what we were meeting about and we told her. She said she had heard we would be putting up poles for goal-posts for soccer, rugby and netball fields and wished to stress that we could not do that without the permission of the municipality! We asked if she wanted to stop the kids playing sports, would the municipality rather that they were smoking tik. She claimed the meeting was illegal. People protested that this was a free country. She claimed we were not allowed to meet on municipal ‘premises’. (Premises includes a building but there was no building there!). People asked where were they supposed to meet to plan for the picnic and sports event on Saturday: there was no community hall. This was like the prohibition of meetings under apartheid. She was confused and left. But, just as we were closing the meeting, the bakkie returned and she repeated that it was an illegal meeting and since we refused to disperse, she was calling the SAPS. The meeting was already ending, so we closed it and waited around. After about twenty minutes an SAPS van arrived with its blue lights flashing. They conversed with the “Anti-Land Invasion” people for about ten minutes and then drove off, after which the municipality bakkie drove off down the road and stopped. We all walked after it to see if they were buying their supper in a shop but then they drove off.

We demand that the media ask the municipality for an answer as to on what authority and under what law this municipal employee declared the meeting illegal. To prevent free assembly and free speech is a violation of the constitution.

We also demand that the media should find out what plans the municipality has for this big stretch of open land that they are so jealously protecting, when there are thousands of people desperate for housing.

If this apartheid repression of free assembly and free speech is a foretaste of what the Zille provincial regime holds in store, then we are in for a huge fight.

Stop apartheid repression! Disband the Anti-Land Invasion Unit! Stop evictions! Provide community halls, sports facilities, and housing for all!

For comment contact: Mzonke Poni ABM WC chairperson

Or Theliwe Macekiswana 083 248 1658 or Ronell 073 775 5132

AbM Cape Town: Second day of the cleaning campaign – The 14th May 2009

http://www.khayelitshastruggles.com

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Second day of the cleaning campaign: The 14th May 2009

Abahlali tomorrow on the 14th of May will continue with its cleaning campaign on the land that we have identified by ourselves for our activities, and our cleaning campaign will continue till Friday.

Place: Macassar Village

Time: From 10:00 am till late

Direction: use N2 towards Somerset West and park at the first Engine garage after passing Barden Powell turn off, and cross the N2 towards shell and after shell garage you’ll see us or call 073 775 5132 or 083 248 165 8 to be picked up at Shell garage.

While Abahlali baseMjondolo DBN tomorrow will be contesting the slums act in the constitutional court at Johannesburg (for more info about the slums act case visit www.abahlali.org), Abahali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape will be contesting it on the ground.

Abahlali Western Cape supports the ABM DBN in the struggle against KZN Government; while we note that the language that is being used in the court is not the language of the poor and is not the language that is understandable to us.

We therefore (ABM WC) decided to take practical measure to mobilize communities and work towards creating sustainable communities from below as part of saying as long as government still talks about us and take decisions about us we will continue taking our decisions democratically and carry them democratically at a community level and we will refuse by all means to be bounded by their decisions and we will continue to defend our actions on the ground and if it means we must use courts as Abahlali DBN have done we will as our last resort.

For comment please call: Mzonke Poni ABM WC Chairperson at 073 2562 036

Theliwe Macikiswana at 083 248 165 8 or Ronell at 073 775 5132