Category Archives: Mpume Madlala

Daily News articles on the rebuilding of Kennedy Road

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5543425

The City is not doing a study to determione the feesibility of upgrading. The study was done some time ago and an agreement between Abahlali baseMjondolo and the City to upgrade the settlement was signed and publicly presented in the settlement in February 2009. It followed years of struggle by AbM against the state’s plans to ‘eradicate’ the settlement and for an insitu upgrade.

The new decision by the City to provide electricity to shack settlements is an important breakthrough and also follows years of struggle on this issue by AbM.

Kennedy Road might get brick houses at last

July 06, 2010 Edition 1

ARTHI SANPATH

KENNEDY Road settlement residents’ waiting days may soon be over.

The eThekwini Municipality’s housing division is busy with a study to determine whether a portion of the settlement can be upgraded on the same plot of land, and for the rest of the residents to be relocated to the proposed 70 000-unit Cornubia housing project in the north of Durban.

Faizel Seedat, senior manager of planning in the city’s housing department, said yesterday that this was part of the city’s strategy to reduce the number of informal settlements in the region.

He was commenting in the wake of Kennedy Road’s latest fire, that left two people dead, and about 2 000 homeless.

“The residents have been told about the upgrade and relocation plans, and we are working on it,” said Seedat.

The Kennedy Road settlement is not the only settlement within the municipal boundaries needing urgent attention.

About 140 000 families live in just more than 400 informal settlements spread across the region. Amaoti, in Inanda, is the largest with about 14 000 families, according to Seedat.

This figure represents just informal settlement dwellings alone.

According to two different studies, the city has to cater for anything between 200 000 and 400 000 families that live in informal settlements, backyard shacks and traditional and rural dwellings.

Seedat’s department oversees the identification of land for development of housing projects.

The department also investigates whether informal settlements can be upgraded where they are, or whether there is a need for relocation.

Challenge

Seedat said that since 1994, the city had built 150 000 houses a year, and this was subject to getting funding, which was the major challenge.

But the municipality was optimistic and hoping to make headway in erasing the backlog.

In the meantime, the city was intent on providing services such as water and electricity to the residents.

“While water and sanitation has been provided, we are now extending to providing electricity and building roads,” said Seedat.

This extension of the “package of interim services” started this month with the pilot projects in Kenville and Redcliffe, in Verulam.

Residents will be provided with a prepaid electricity meter, and will still qualify for a free basic quota of electricity.

“This would hopefully go towards ending the use of candles,” he said.

At the present rate, the informal settlement backlogs could be erased by 2043.

Each house costs about R86 000 to build, but Seedat said the city was building better houses than the provincial Human Settlements Department considered good housing.

Seedat said the growing number of settlements was a “cause for concern” and the fast rate of service delivery was a “magnet” to people coming into the city.

“We see a trend where larger families are splitting up and creating their own shacks in the settlement, so while the families are getting smaller, the number of units is growing,” he said.

To accommodate the masses, land was needed.

“Essentially, it is who can get to the land first and acquire it quickly, but you need money,” he said.

arthi.sanpath@inl.co.za

In the last couple of years the City has exploited fires to force people into the amatins. Dube’s promise to provide building materials breaks with that project and follows both the demand by AbM in this case and the new model prioneered by AbM and the City in Kennedy Road since 2007. Dube’s comments about the roads are self serving and ridiculous. AbM has been demanding that the state build access road for years!

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5543420

Homes rapidly rebuilt after fire
Cold weather motivates shack dwellers

July 06, 2010 Edition 1

MPUME MADLALA

SOME of the shack dwellers at the Kennedy Road informal settlement could not wait for help to arrive after their homes went up in flames on Sunday morning.

It was cold and they had to have a roof over their heads as soon as possible and began rebuilding their shacks throughout the night.

There is confusion about how the fire started. Conflicting reports say that it was started by a candle on Sunday morning or by a paraffin stove bursting into flames.

The blaze cost two people their lives, destroyed more than 500 shacks and left about 2 000 people displaced.

The MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Nomusa Dube, visited the affected people yesterday and sympathised with the residents about their living conditions.

Dube, in the Kennedy Road Hall, said the government had plans to assist people as it was aware that most victims had lost everything, including their ID books.

“We are trying to find means of helping you so that things can go back to normal,” she said.

She then asked them to co-operate with officials by leaving space for roads to be built “so that it will be easy for emergency personnel to get to you quickly during disasters”, she explained.

Dube said if there had been roads within the settlement there would have been less damage.

Apart from the food parcels donated by the Al Imdaad Foundation (AIF), Dube said, the government had also asked for baby formula from the foundation as there were many babies that had been left without milk.

She was met with applause when she promised that building material was on the way.

Nonhlanhla Ntuli, 33, who lost everything in the blaze, said she was more than happy to be moved from the settlement if it ever came to that because every day people lived a life of not knowing what was going to happen to their homes.

“You go to work and throughout the day, you worry about whether your shack is going to be there or not when you get back because life here is unpredictable,” she said.

Siyabonga Dlamini said the material that was supposed to be brought to them for shelter never arrived.

She had spent the night in the open helping neighbours rebuild their home from material salvaged from the blaze.

“You really cannot fall asleep in the cold. So we did the next best thing which was to keep busy,” he said.

And by yesterday morning, several shacks had already been rebuilt.

AIF national co-ordinator Yacoob Vahed said the organisation remained committed to providing aid to those affected by natural or man-made disasters, whether they occurred in South Africa or abroad.

Daily News: Fire guts homes of 2 000

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5542079

Front Page

Fire guts homes of 2 000
Durban blamed for not building houses

July 05, 2010 Edition 1

MPUME MADLALA

‘I will never forget the sight of those burnt bodies as long as I live,” said Sanele Mbambo, who helped pull out the remains of two people at the Kennedy Road informal settlement after a fire destroyed more than 500 shacks early yesterday morning.

The fire, believed to have been started by a candle, had left 2 000 people displaced, said police spokesman Colonel Jay Naicker.

Most were left with only the clothes on their backs.

Residents are angry, questioning why proper homes had not been built and blaming the fast-spreading fire on cramped conditions and a lack of facililities.

Mbambo said he had been sleeping at 3:30am when he was woken by people screaming. When he opened his door, he found the frame on fire. “I poured water around the door and fortunately the flames died down,” he said.

Mbambo said people came asking for help as there were people buried under the rubble of their shacks.

“The first we pulled out was an elderly man who was burnt really badly. He may have been burnt while sleeping, but by the time we pulled him out at 6:30am, he had already died. The sad thing he was all alone in his shack,” he said.

The next body they pulled out was also that of a man.

“It was really sad to see because for a long time we have been asking our government to do something about our living conditions.

“Lives have been lost here today and, if we all had proper homes, it would not have happened. I am just disappointed that I have even lost count of the number of times that shacks have been burnt in this informal settlement,” he said.

Barely able to contain her tears was Nomusa Nguse who narrowly missed being engulfed by flames with her two-month-old baby, Sphelele.

“I just cannot believe this is happening again. I was sleeping when the fire started; it was only when I felt unbearable heat that I woke up to see that the fire was burning the shack next to mine and was heading my direction.

“I just grabbed my baby and went to the street where I found many others waiting,” she said.

Nguse said she and her baby had been left with nothing as she had not have time to pack anything for her baby. She was afraid that she might have lost her uncle during the ordeal.

“He only had one leg and I really don’t think he made it because he could not walk properly. I heard that two people died and because I have not seen him, he must have been the other one.

“Is this we voted for? Here in the shacks, we live terrible lives and I don’t think the government sees us as human beings. It’s only when we have to vote that they care about us and it is not right,” she said.

Thandeka Hlatshwayo, who sat at the side of the road holding her four-month-old baby brother, Nhlanhla, said she was shocked at how quickly the fire spread.

“One moment we were looking at the fire from a distance. We really did not think that it would reach our shacks, but it did.

“We all almost died in there and looking at the damage we are grateful to be alive,” she said.

Others said they were not going to give up on life, but had given up hoping the government would ever give them homes.

“They have no shame for using us just to get votes and then live us to continue with our suffering. It’s not nice to live the way we do, but we try. We will not give up on life, but our government has really failed us,” said Innocent Ndlovu who also lost everything.

Mnikelo Ndabankulu, spokesman for homeless organisation Abahlali BaseMjondolo, said this time they wanted the municipality to do more than just make promises, as they did every time there was a shack fire.

“They promised to build roads within the informal settlement and that has not been done. What our people need are proper houses with electricity and water. If they had those things we would not have so many fires. Forgetting is natural and we can’t blame people for forgetting their candles. It would be different if they forgot to switch off their legal electricity, nothing would catch fire,” he said.

Ndbankulu said that since 1994 people had been promised proper homes: “We want to know who must give out the order before these homes are built. How many people must die before we see houses?

“The country can afford to build stadiums that cost billions, but what about their people? Things must change,” he said.

The homeless would be put into a massive tent while they rebuilt their lives, said Ndabankulu.

He said that instead of being offered temporary, one-roomed tin houses by the council, the people should receive the materials to build their own homes, which had several rooms.

Anyone wanting to help can contact Ndabankulu at 079 745 0653 or their office at 031 304 6420.

Daily News: South Durban residents in service delivery march

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5234313

South Durban residents in service delivery march

November 06, 2009 Edition 2

MPUME MADLALA

More than 250 South Durban residents and Abahlali baseMjondolo supporters marched down Pixley Kasema (West) Street to Durban City Hall to protest against poor service delivery.

The marchers, mostly dressed in white Wentworth Development Forum T-shirts, shouted slogans like: “Down with Eskom’s high rates” and carried banners reading “Dear mayor, please fire Sutcliffe”, “Logie Naidoo, please bring Clairwood back to former glory” and “Stop the talk implement the upgrade of Wentworth”.

The residents said they had a right to decent housing, redevelopment, affordable electricity rates and a pollution-free environment.

South Durban Community Environmental Alliance co-ordinator Desmond D’Sa said residents were concerned about the lack of housing delivery.

“They are worried about the fact that the flats they live in are not upgraded and maintained, yet the municipality and provincial housing wants to transfer ownership (to tenants),” D’Sa said.

D’Sa said Eskom and the eThekwini Municipality had recently increased electricity and water tariffs to an unaffordable rate. “Since then we have seen communities deprived of water and lights. Further tariff increases by Eskom will affect the poor and marginalised which will result in an increase in electricity cut-offs to their homes,” he said.

D’Sa said the marchers would proceed to the City Hall and then to the offices of the provincial Housing Department where memorandums will be handed over to officials.

“We will also be sending a letter to the Department of Social Welfare and Development demanding that all pensioners be exempt from paying tax and bank charges,” he said.

Daily News: 94 arrested for protest thefts at supermarkets

http://www.dailynews.co.za/?fArticleId=5095860

Looting sprees to continue
94 arrested for protest thefts at supermarkets

July 23, 2009 Edition 3

MPUME MADLALA

PROTESTERS behind the looting of two Durban supermarkets have pledged to continue targeting food retailers to highlight their hunger and desperation.

One of the supermarkets has announced, in the wake of surprise invasions yesterday which saw 94 people arrested, that it would pursue prosecutions in each and every case.

KwaZulu-Natal has been hardest hit by the recession in terms of job losses, and the SA Unemployed Peoples’ Movement (SAUPM) said today the food snatches would continue until the plight of the jobless was recognised.

Police said they arrested 44 people at Checkers in Dr Pixley KaSeme (West) Street yesterday, and 50 were arrested at Pick n Pay at The Workshop. “They were arrested for illegal gathering and theft and they will appear in court soon,” said provincial spokesman Captain Khephu Ndlovu.

Nozipho Mteshana, the chairwoman of SAUPM, said yesterday’s protest was the first where unemployed people targeted supermarkets in Durban.

For more than an hour yesterday Shoprite Checkers remained closed after a large group walked into the store and started eating food off the shelves without paying. A strong contingent of police arrived and customers and onlookers were told to leave the premises.

The protesters were made to lie down inside the store while more police vans were called.

An elderly woman who had gone to collect her pension money from the store said that one moment she was standing in the queue, and the next thing she was told to go outside along with many other customers.

“When I saw the police, I panicked, but I was told to go outside quickly. I have never been so scared in my life, the guns gave me such a fright. So I won’t go back there until tomorrow when everything has calmed down,” she said.

Ndlovu said the protesters at both stores had helped themselves to perishable goods, such as roast chicken and chips. Most of them were women.

Mteshana insisted the protesters had done nothing wrong except eat and this was because they were hungry: “This is the frustration that people are experiencing and the financial situation and the continuing job losses do not make things any better for our people.

“Look at the Early Morning Market traders, what will happen them?” she asked.

Sarita van Wyk of Shoprite Checkers said more than 40 charges of theft had been laid by the Shoprite Group with the SAPS.

Brian Weyers, corporate marketing director of the Shoprite Group, said shoplifting remained a problem in the retail industry. It cost businesses millions of rands annually and, for this reason, the Shoprite group would seek prosecution in each and every case.

“As the matter is under police investigation, the supermarket group is not in a position to comment on the matter,” he said.

In its analysis of the quarterly labour force figures, Stats SA said more than 117 000 jobs were lost in KwaZulu-Natal in the first quarter of 2009 because of the recession.

The numbers showed that this province has lost the most jobs in the country when compared with the first quarter of 2008.

The first-quarter figures showed that South Africa’s unemployment rate increased by 1.6 percent from 21.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008 to 23.5 percent, and a total of 208 000 jobs were lost in South Africa between the two quarters.

Job losses recorded within the trade sector accounted for 143 000, followed by construction (65 000) and manufacturing (62 000).

In KwaZulu-Natal, the trade sector registered the highest number of job cuts (79 000), followed by agriculture (29 000).

Daily News: Police stoned after blaze

This is not even vaguely accurate…it is what happens when stories are written with, of all people, the police as a single source. And it must be noted that there are always attempts to slander the victims of shack fires – most often as ungrateful quarrelling drunkards who cause the fires and then reject help.In fact the police arrived long after the fire brigade who had already got the blaze under control. There was a clash with the police after they tried to arrest a woman who had been blamed for the fire. People resisted the attempt at arrest and then started shooting with rubber bullets. They always shoot at any crowd of people in or coming from a shack settlement. Negotiation is not on their agenda. Not ever. It was after they started shooting that the stones were thrown. The actions of the police, and what they told this journalist, was just more of their usual attempts to blame the victims. The Kennedy Committee has to intervene and explain to the police that their job was to protect this woman.

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5037894

Police stoned after blaze

June 16, 2009 Edition 1

MPUME MADLALA

TWO Metro policemen were hospitalised after they were stoned by residents at the Kennedy Road informal settlement during a blaze that destroyed almost a hundred shacks this morning.

Residents were angry over the perceived slow response by the city’s fire department, and turned on the policemen who arrived first.

Fire department divisional commander Trevor Stevens said firemen were at the scene minutes after an emergency call was placed.

Police spokesman Senior Superintendent Vincent Mdunge said police were called to the scene by a man who claimed his girlfriend tried to set fire to him as he slept.

Mdunge said the man managed to escape and called the police. “When the SAPS and Metro Police arrived they were greeted by stones coming from residents who were angry that their shacks had caught fire and that fire-fighters had not arrived,” he said.

“Two Metro policemen were seriously injured – one sustained injuries to the head and the other to his body – and had to be rushed to hospital,” he said.

Mdunge said that as a result of the fire, about 100 shacks were destroyed, leaving many people displaced.

He said the woman who allegedly started the fire was taken in for questioning, and the city’s disaster management unit was trying to find shelter for those who had been displaced.