Category Archives: Memorandum

Memorandum of Demands to the Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal Dr. Zweli Mkhize and Cllr Themba Mtshali

Memorandum of Demands to the Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal Dr. Zweli Mkhize and Cllr Themba Mtshali – Delivered by a March on the Offices of Themba Mtshali on Friday, 7 December 2012

We, the residents, men and women, of Ward 23 and members of the Abahlali baseMjondolo Movement SA in KwaZulu-Natal are democrats committed to the flourishing of this country. We speak for ourselves and direct our own struggle. We have been mobilized by our own suffering and our hope for a better future.

It is time to take seriously the fact that land is a serious problem in our country. It is time to take seriously that land was stolen from our ancestors and that this has impoverished us. It is time to take seriously that housing development in this city is a corrupt mess that does not just leave us without houses or services but has also terrorized our communities.

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Memorandum Handed to Senior Superintendent De Villiers of the Sydenham Police Station

Friday, September 28, 2012

MEMORANDUM HANDED TO SENIOR SUPERINTENDENT DE VILLIERS OF THE SYDENHAM POLICE STATION

Three years after the attack on our Movement, the Kennedy Road Displacees Remain Homeless and in Exile

We as men, women and children of the Kennedy Road settlement are gathered here tonight to express our deepest pain and suffering at being refused our right to citizenship, safety and freedom by a government that was meant to save all its people – blacks and whites, poor and rich, young and old and of all genders – from suffering, division and oppression with justice, equality and dignity.
Today, we remember with anger how our leadership, its families, our close friends and close comrades were attacked by the gang associated with the ruling party. Today we remember how our homes were destroyed, looted and burnt down for months – often in broad day light. Today we remember how all this happened in the presence of all state security forces without any of their assistance despite our please for their help. Today we remember how many of us had to deal with trauma in the dark confined corners without any state assistance. Today we remember how our children dreamt nightmares of the incidents. Today we remember how many of us had to leave their jobs and return to their dry rural areas with no jobs and no government presence and nothing but Ubuntu. Today we remember how the Kennedy 12, first the Kennedy 13 suffered in the hands of those who always claim that they liberated this country. Today we remember how our brothers were killed on these days.

Today we remember how the government of the day, from local to national, has pretended not to have seen and known our situation. Today we have learnt how poor people are treated in the new South Africa. Today we can rest assured that the government of the day will never care about the poor. Today we want the whole world to know that the same government they once supported has turned against its own people and become its new oppressors.

Today we make the following demands:

1. Land and safe homes for the displaced families
2. Return or compensation for all personal belongings lost in the attack
3. Immediate arrest of our attackers who still enjoy the protection of the state.
4. Healing process for these families
5. Re-integration in good faith of the displaced families that wish to return to Kennedy.
6. Participatory democracy
7. Real freedom and democracy.

Today we ask how much must we pay for our citizenship? Today we ask much longer shall we serve our sentence in exile?

Today we unite just like how many communities and workers are uniting around the country and around the world against injustices. We express our solidarity with comrades in the mines and everywhere injustices prevail.

Today we wish to state clearly that we will not allow repression by the ruling party and the police to destroy our struggle. We remain committed to the struggle for land, freedom and dignity.

Delivered at…………………………………………………on…………………………………………………………………………2012
Received by………………………………………………..

Memorandum to Madikizela, MEC for Human Settlements

ABAHLALI BASEMJONDOLO MOVEMENT OF SOUTH AFRICA (WESTERN CAPE PROVINCE)

Website: khayelitshastruggles.com or www.abahlali.org
Email: abmwesterncape@abahlali.org office admin: 073 2562 936/ 078 760 5246 

To: Provincial Department of Human Settlement
No 27 Wale Street
Cape Town
8001

Attention: MEC for Human Settlement Bonginkosi Madikizela

Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape would like your response on the following matters as a matter of urgency.

· The Western Cape had a crisis of housing, as this province already had a backlog of about 500 000 and this number is increasing about 20 000 per annum and the provincial department of human settlement only manage to build up to 16 000 houses per annum to respond to this crisis. In our view we believe that the departmental intervention will not solve the housing crisis in this province and it will take more than 50 years to solve the housing crisis in this province, if not then we demand to know from you:

a) If when do you plan to eradicate the informal settlements through out the province

b) And how do you intend to do it, and we need a clear plan with time lines

· As part of the national standard, people residing within informal settlement are not suppose to access water on a distance more than 100 mitre walking distance, and at least 1 toilet need to be shared by 4 dwelling and a bucket system was supposed to be phased out completely by 2004, and it is shocking to find out that there are people who use toilets which are even below the bucket system by not having toilets at all.

To many of our people these national standards are still a dream not a reality, as most of us still have to walk for a distance which is more than 100 m walking distance in order to access water, and toilets.

And we therefore demand to know from you:

c) if by when your department plans to better off this appalling conditions in which our people continue to live under off with no clear direction.

d) and when do you intend to phase out the bucket system through out the province, and we need a clear plan with all the areas that still use the bucket system and with a clear plan for each area and time lines.

· And most of our settlements continue to be the victims of evictions as most of our settlements are not recognised as legal occupiers And it is a shame for people who are evicted from their areas and sent straight to TRA’s (temporal relocation areas) where people continue to live under worst conditions than those they were living under off.

And we therefore demand that:

e) declare all the temporal relocation areas (TRA’s) as unconstitutional as they are not suitable for human habitant and we therefore call upon you to immediately relocate all those who are currently living in TRA’s into proper houses and do away with TRA’s through out the province.

f) We also call upon you do announce upgrading plan for all informal settlements through out the province with clear outlines.

Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape has made a serious call of ‘a week of informal settlement strike’ and our alliance partners within Poor Peoples Alliance (which is Abahlali baseMjondolo DBN, Landless Peoples Movement Johannesburg, Rural Network KZN and Anti eviction campaign Western Cape are supporting the call and a Conference for democratic left (which is a affiliates of more than 10 community based organization and independent unions) and Jubilee South Africa are also supporting this call

We will await for your response within a period of 14 days, and should we not hear anything from you within this period we will be left with no choice but to announce the date of a week of informal settlement strike which will result to a complete stand still of the country’s production.

While waiting for your response we will continue engaging with progressive community groups, unions, students movements, none governmental organization and churches to support the call.

On behalf of ABM WC

Mzonke Poni

ABM WC Chairperson

abmwesterncape@abahlali.org or 073 2562 036

Demands of the Women’s March on Jacob Zuma

The Abahlali baseMjondolo Women’s League march on Jacob Zuma will take place tomorrow on Friday 27th August 2010. It will begin at 8:00 a.m. at Botha’s Park and proceed to the City Hall. The President’s office has nominated a representative to collect our memorandum. As usual the office of Mike Sutcliffe, the City Manager, has not yet granted us the permit that he, in blatant violation of the law, still uses to curtail our right to protest. We have complied with all the legal requirements to stage a legal march and will be marching whether or not Sutcliffe decides to allow us to exercise a basic democratic right.

Our general memorandum to President Jacob Zuma is below. It repeats all of the demands that we have previously made to his office because they have not yet been addressed. Each settlement has also held meetings of the women comrades in that settlement to develop a set of demands for that settlement. We will continue to make these demands to President Jacob Zuma until they are addressed. These are the demands that need to be addressed in order to achieve the restoration of the full dignity of all poor women in South Africa.

At this time we also affirm our full support for the strike by public sector unions. In our movement there are many people who are also members of COSATU unions. And as S’bu Zikode recently said in a newspaper interview:

“What the unions are asking for is completely legitimate. Most civil servants are very badly paid in comparison to government officials and legislators -these unjustifiable gaps must be breached. We know that legislators pay themselves generous bonuses each year, as well as a driving subsidy and other benefits. Then they say they can’t afford to raise salaries… No Way. They’re crazy.

The unemployment rate is extremely high in South Africa [25.3%], and many jobless people look to their relatives with a job for support. The fact that those who do work barely have enough to live by, let alone support others, makes things even worse. The government needs to look for a compromise that will allow workers to contribute to society and to meet the urgent and legitimate needs of their families.”

We also reaffirm our full support for the demand from the Unemployed People’s Movement for a guaranteed income for all unemployed people.

For more information and comment please contact Miss Bandile Mdlalose at 031- 3046420 or Miss Fikile Manqele at 084 980 7434.

A Memorandum of Demands to President Jacob Zuma Friday, 27 August 2010

A new tactic and a politic of just acknowledging our letters by Government without action and conscious must come to an end.

We, women, members and supporters of Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Rural Network in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, are democrats committed to the flourishing of this country. We speak for ourselves and direct our own struggles. We have no hidden agendas. We have been mobilised by our suffering and our hopes for a better life. We believe that it is time to take seriously the fact that South Africa belongs to all who live in it.

We come from the townships of Inanda, KwaMashu and Lamontville. We come from the farms in eNkwalini, New Hanover, Howick, KwaNjobokazi, Melmoth, Utrecht, Babanango and Eshowe. We come from the flats of Hillary, Portview, Ridge View (Cator Manor), Wentworth and New Dunbar. We come from the shacks of Joe Slovo, Foreman Road, Clare Estate, Palmiet Road, Quarry Road, Motala Heights, Siyanda, Umkhumbane, New Emmaus, Permary Ridge, Arnett Drive, KwaMashu, Lindelani, Richmond Farm and, yes, Kennedy Road. We come from the transit camps of Richmond Farm, eNsimbini, Ridge View (Transit Camp),Glandin in KwaMaphumulo, eMangweni (eMtshezi), Cato Manor and New Dunbar.

We are all agreed that there is a serious crisis in our country. The poor are being pushed out of any meaningful access to citizenship. We are becoming poorer. We are being forced off our land and out of our cities. The councillor system has become a form of top down political control. It does not take our voices upwards. The democracy that we won in 1994 is turning into a new system of oppression for the poor.

We all agreed that this country is rich because of the theft of our land and because of our work in the farms, mines, factories, kitchens and laundries of the rich. That wealth is therefore also our wealth. We are all agreed that the democratic gains that were won in 1994 were won by the struggles of the people and that we, the poor, are part of the people. Those victories are therefore also our victories. We are all agreed that we cannot and will not continue to suffer in the way that we do. We are all agreed that we cannot and will not give up our hopes for a better life and a fair world.

We have had meetings in all of our areas to discuss this march. Each area has developed its own set of demands which we are presenting to you. We have also taken all the demands that are common to many areas and put them together into this statement of our collective demands. We offer it to you as a statement of our demands. We also proclaim it to ourselves and to the world as a charter for our next phase of struggle.

For too long we have been subject to evictions from our homes, be they in shack settlements or farms. These evictions are often unlawful, they are often violent and they often leave the poor destitute. Therefore we demand an immediate end to all evictions so that we can live in peace and with security.

For too long our communities have survived in substandard and informal housing. Therefore, we demand decent housing so that we can live in safety, health and dignity.

For too long those of us living in shacks have suffered without enough water and without toilets, electricity, refuse collection and drainage. Therefore we demand decent social services in all our communities so that we can live in safety, health and dignity.

For too long many of those of us who are formally connected to water and electricity have not been able to afford the costs of these services and face disconnection. Therefore, we demand that these services be made free for the poor.

For too long the promise of housing has been downgraded to forced removal to a transit camp. These transit camps are more like prisons than homes. If they are ‘delivery’ then they are the delivery of the people into oppression. Therefore we demand an immediate and permanent end to all transit camps so that the dignity of the people that have been taken to the camps can be immediately restored.

For too long the housing that has been built has been built in human dumping grounds far outside of the cities and far from work, schools, clinics and libraries. Therefore we demand immediate action to release well located land for public housing. Where necessary land must be expropriated for this purpose. The social value of urban land must be put before its commercial value.

For too long people that are already languishing in human dumping grounds have been unable to access the cities. Therefore we demand the immediate provision of safe and reliable subsidised public transport to these areas.

For too long there has been rampant corruption in the construction and allocation of housing in transit camps, RDP housing and social housing. Therefore we demand complete transparency in the construction and allocation of all housing and an immediate end to corruption. We demand, in particular, a full and transparent audit into all the activities of the social housing company SOCHO– including its CEO, general manager and board of directors. We demand a similar audit into all the activities of Nandi Mandela and her associates.

For too long poor flat dwellers have suffered from unaffordable and exploitative rents. Therefore we demand the writing off of all arrears and the institution of an affordable flat rate for all.

For too long the poor have been forced to sign exploitative rental agreements under duress and threat of eviction. Therefore we demand the cancellation and collective renegotiation of all rental agreements signed under duress.

For too long farm dwellers have suffered the impoundment of their cattle, demolition of their homes, the denial of the right to bury their loved ones on the land, the denial of basic service and brutality and sometimes even murder at the hands of some farmers. The bias that the justice system has towards the rich has meant that it has systematically undermined farm dwellers. Therefore we demand immediate and practical action to secure the rights of farm dwellers.

For too long a fair distribution and use of rural land has been made impossible by the fact that land –a gift from God – has been turned into a commodity. Therefore we demand immediate steps to put the social value of rural land before its commercial value.

For too long the attack on our movement, its leaders and well known members, their family members and its offices in the Kennedy Road settlement in September last year has received the full backing of the local party and government structures. Therefore we demand

*a serious, comprehensive and credible investigation into the attack and its subsequent handling by the local party and government structures. This must include a full investigation into the role of the South African Police Services.

*the right to return for all the victims of the attack, including the Kennedy Road Development Committee and all its sub-committees. This right must be backed up with high level protection for the security of all the residents of the settlement.

*full compensation for everyone who lost their homes, possessions and livelihoods in the attack.

*We demand a full and public apology by Willies Mchunu for the attack and its subsequent handling.

*We demand the immediate release of those members of the Kennedy 13 who are still being held in detention.

*We need an immediate steps be taken to ensure that Willies Mchunu, Nigel Gumede and Yakoob Baig are not allowed to interfere in any police or judicial processes resulting from the attack.

*An end to the new politic of just acknowledging receipt of our demands without any conscious and action.

For too long our communities have been ravaged by the cruelest forms of poverty. Therefore we demand the creation of well-paying and dignified jobs.

For too long the right to education has been reserved for the rich. Therefore we demand free education for the poor.

For too long we have not been safe from criminals and violence. We are especially concerned about the lack of safety for women in our communities. Therefore we demand immediate practical action to secure the safety of everyone and, in particular, the safety of women.

For too long the poor have been turned against the poor. Therefore we demand an immediate end to all forms of discrimination against isiXhosa speaking people (amamPondo) and people born in other countries.

For too long the legal system has been biased against the poor. Therefore we demand serious practical action to ensure that access to justice is no longer distorted by access to money.

For too long the councillor system has been used to control the people from above and to stifle their voices. Therefore we demand the immediate recognition of the right of all people to, if they so wish, organise themselves outside of party structures.

Furthermore, just as people from around the city, the province and the country are uniting in support of our struggle we express our support for our comrades elsewhere. We have stood with, and will continue to stand with our comrades in Wentworth, our comrades in the Poor People’s Alliance and struggling communities and movements across the country. We thank everyone who has demonstrated solidarity with our struggle including church leaders, students and our comrades in other countries. We will do our best to offer the same support to your struggles.

Finally, we demand that the office of the presidency come and meet with us at our offices so that a solution can be found within seven days. We note that seven days is long enough as this Memorandum is now being sent to you for the third time this year since the 22 March 2010 and on the 16 June 2010. And on both occasions Adv. Cyril Xaba from the office of the Premier has been receiving these Memo without conscious.

Handed over by:______________________ on __________________ at ____________
Signature:_________________________
Received by:________________________
Signature:___________________________

TO FOLLOW UP PLEASE CONTACT: Miss Bandile Mdlalose at 031- 3046420 or Miss Fikile Manqele at 084 980 7434.

A Memorandum of Demands to President Jacob Zuma

A Memorandum of Demands to President Jacob Zuma
Monday, 22 March 2010

We, members and supporters of Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Rural Network in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, are democrats committed to the flourishing of this country. We speak for ourselves and direct our own struggles. We have no hidden agendas. We have been mobilised by our suffering and our hopes for a better life. We believe that it is time to take seriously the fact that South Africa belongs to all who live in it.

We come from the townships of Inanda, KwaMashu and Lamontville. We come from the farms in eNkwalini, New Hanover, Howick, KwaNjobokazi, Melmoth, Utrecht, Babanango and eShowe. We come from the flats of Hillary, Portview, Ridge View (Cato Manor), Wentworth and New Dunbar. We come from the shacks of Joe Slovo, Foreman Road, Clare Estate, Palmiet Road, Quarry Road, Motala Heights, Siyanda, Umkhumbane, New eMmaus, Pemary Ridge, Arnett Drive, Lindelani, Richmond Farm and, yes, Kennedy Road. We come from the transit camps of Richmond Farm, eNsimbini, Ridge View (Transact Camp), Cato Manor and New Dunbar.

We are all agreed that there is a serious crisis in our country. The poor are being pushed out of any meaningful access to citizenship. We are becoming poorer. We are being forced off our land and out of our cities. The councillor system has become a form of top down political control. It does not take our voices upwards. The democracy that we won in 1994 is turning into a new system of oppression for the poor.

We are all agreed that this country is rich because of the theft of our land and because of our work in the farms, mines, factories, kitchens and laundries of the rich. That wealth is therefore also our wealth. We are all agreed that the democratic gains that were won in 1994 were won by the struggles of the people and that we, the poor, are part of the people. Those victories are therefore also our victories. We are all agreed that we can not and will not continue to suffer in the way that we do. We are all agreed that we can not and will not give up our hopes for a better life and a fair world.

We have had meetings in all of our areas to discuss this march. Each area has developed its own set of demands which we are presenting to you. We have also taken all the demands that are common to many areas and put them together into this statement of our collective demands. We offer it to you as a statement of our demands. We also proclaim it to ourselves and to the world as a charter for the next phase of our struggle.

For too long we have been subject to evictions from our homes, be they in shack settlements or farms. These evictions are often unlawful, they are often violent and they often leave the poor destitute. Therefore we demand an immediate end to all evictions so that we can live in peace and with security.

For too long our communities have survived in substandard and informal housing. Therefore, we demand decent housing so that we can live in safety, health and dignity.

For too long those of us living in shacks have suffered without enough water and without toilets, electricity, refuse collection and drainage. Therefore we demand decent social services in all our communities so that we can live in safety, health and dignity.

For too long many of those of us who are formally connected to water and electricity have not been able to afford the costs of these services and face disconnection. Therefore we demand that these services be made free for the poor.

For too long the promise of housing has been downgraded to forced removal to a transit camp. These transit camps are more like prisons than homes. If they are ‘delivery’ then they are the delivery of the people into oppression. Therefore we demand an immediate and permanent end to all transit camps so that the dignity of the people that have been taken to the camps can be immediately restored.

For too long the housing that has been built has been built in human dumping grounds far outside of the cities and far from work, schools, clinics and libraries. Therefore we demand immediate action to release well located land for public housing. Where necessary land must be expropriated for this purpose. The social value of urban land must be put before its commercial value.

For too long people that are already languishing in human dumping grounds have been unable to access the cities. Therefore we demand the immediate provision of safe and reliable subsidised public transport to these areas.

For too long there has been rampant corruption in the construction and allocation of housing in transit camps, RDP housing and social housing. Therefore we demand complete transparency in the construction and allocation of all housing and an immediate end to corruption. We demand, in particular, a full and transparent audit into all the activities of the social housing company SOCHO – including its CEO, general manager and board of directors. We demand a similar audit into all the activities of Nandi Mandela and her associates.

For too long poor flat dwellers have suffered from unaffordable and exploitative rents. Therefore we demand the writing off of all arrears and the institution of an affordable flat rate for all.

For too long the poor have been forced to sign exploitative rental agreements under duress and threat of eviction. Therefore we demand the cancellation and collective renegotiation of all rental agreements signed under duress.

For too long farm dwellers have suffered the impoundment of their cattle, demolition of their homes, the denial of the right to burry their loved ones on the land, the denial of basic service and brutality, and sometimes even murder, at the hands of some farmers. The bias that the justice system has towards the rich has meant that it has systematically undermined farm dwellers. Therefore we demand immediate and practical action to secure the rights of farm dwellers.

For too long a fair distribution and use of rural land has been made impossible by the fact that land –a gift from God – has been turned into a commodity. Therefore we demand immediate steps to put the social value of rural land before its commercial value.

For too long the attack on our movement, its leaders and well known members, their family members and its offices in the Kennedy Road settlement in September last year has received the full backing of the local party and government structures. Therefore we demand

• a serious, comprehensive and credible investigation into the attack and its subsequent handling by the local party and government structures. This must include a full investigation into the role of the South African Police Services.
• the right to return for all the victims of the attack, including the Kennedy Road Development Committee and all its sub-committees. This right must be backed up with high level protection for the security of all the residents of the settlement.
• full compensation for everyone who lost their homes, possessions and livelihoods in the attack.
• a full and public apology by Willies Mchunu for the attack and its subsequent handling.
• the immediate release of those members of the Kennedy 13 who are still being held in detention.
• that immediate steps be taken to ensure that Willies Mchunu, Nigel Gumede and Yakoob Baig are not allowed to interfere in any police or judicial processes resulting from the attack.

For too long our communities have been ravaged by the cruelest forms of poverty. Therefore we demand the creation of well-paying and dignified jobs.

For too long the right to education has been reserved for the rich. Therefore we demand free education for the poor.

For too long we have not been safe from criminals and violence. We are especially concerned about the lack of safety for women in our communities. Therefore we demand immediate practical action to secure the safety of everyone and, in particular, the safety of women.

For too long the poor have been turned against the poor. Therefore we demand an immediate end to all forms of discrimination against isiXhosa speaking people (amamPondo) and people born in other countries.

For too long the legal system has been biased against the poor. Therefore we demand serious practical action to ensure that access to justice is no longer distorted by access to money.

For too long the councillor system has been used to control the people from above and to stifle their voices. Therefore we demand the immediate recognition of the right of all people to, if they so wish, organise themselves outside of party structures in freedom and safety.

Furthermore, just as people from around the city, the province and the country are uniting in support of our struggle we express our support for our comrades elsewhere. We have stood with, and will continue to stand with our comrades in Wentworth, our comrades in the Poor People’s Alliance and struggling communities and movements across the country. We thank everyone who has demonstrated solidarity with our struggle including church leaders, students and our comrades in other countries. We will do our best to offer the same support to your struggles.

Handed over by:______________________ on __________________ at ____________
Signature:_________________________

Received by:________________________
Signature:___________________________

TO FOLLOW UP PLEASE CONTACT: Mr. Troy Morrow or Mr. S’bu Zikode at 031 – 304 6420.