Category Archives: Natasha Prince

More press reports on the Mitchell’s Plain land occupation

Solidarity with the Taflesig land occupation has been expressed by Abahlali baseMjondolo (Western Cape), The Anti-Eviction Campaign, Zilleraine Heights, Newfields Village AEC and the Mandela Park Backyarders. For comment from Tafelsig phone Mastura on 0718917564.

There is a picture gallery of the occupation and the police response here.

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/articleprog.aspx?id=66033

Police withdraw from invaded CT land
Rafiq Wagiet | 18 May

Cape Town police withdrew from the Swartklip Sports Field in Mitchell’s Plain on Wednesday after forcing illegal dwellers off the vacant municipal land.

The city secured a court interdict on Tuesday allowing it to evict the land invaders.

Wednesday’s stand-off was rather short and subdued compared to the violent clashes seen at the weekend when police were met with the barrage of rocks and in turn fired rubber bullets at the illegal occupants.

A representative of the Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders’ Association kept the crowd calm.

The association said it would attempt to secure a meeting with city officials about the illegal occupation.

In the meantime, the city’s anti-land invasion unit dismantled some of the structures and removed them from the land.

(Edited by Lindiwe Mlandu)

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/05/17/residents-to-boycott-elections-over-houses

Residents to boycott elections over houses
17 May 2011 | Moses Mackay

HUNDREDS of people living in back-yards in Mitchells Plain, Cape Town, said they would not vote in tomorrow’ elections and accused police of brutality.

The large group occupied a piece of vacant land in Tafelsig on Saturday and built about 2500 shacks, saying they had been on the waiting list for many years.

But police opened fire on them with rubber bullets and sprayed the crowd – which included pregnant women and pensioners – with tear-gas.

“We have been on the waiting list for between 16 and 30 years,” an elderly woman said.

A man sustained serious injury when he was shot in the eye. Resident Ismail Abrahams was also injured and admitted to Groote Schuur Hospital. Twelve other people were arrested.

Yesterday, people were busy re-building their shacks after an incident on Saturday.

Police, accompanied by several ambulances, gathered near the area. Sympathetic residents from Khayelitsha and ZilleRaine Heights, about 20kilometres away, came to give their support.

Back-yard dweller Faizel Lee, whose family and four others were staying in a big tent, said they would not vote in the local government elections tomorrow.

“Both the DA and the ANC have failed to address our housing crisis. We have decided not to vote,” he said.

Lee, a father of three, said the ANC and DA had visited on Saturday and gave them food, which only showed that they were trying to buy their votes.

Terence Hoskins said he was also beaten by police armed with batons and that he had suffered injuries to his body.

Hoskins said they had been told by city officials that though there was land, there was no money to build houses.

Mastera Collop of the NGO Women of Action in Tafelsig, said people were tired of false promises and had decided to build their houses in the area.

“Residents will fight for their rights until the bitter end,” Collop said.

She said that they were not happy about the situation and have threatened to disrupt tomorrow’s elections.

ANC mayoral candidate Tony Ehrenreich was set to visit the area today to persuade the group to vote ANC. The withdrawal of hundreds of voters in Mitchells Plain would be a blow to the DA as this area is one of their strongholds.

City of Cape Town spokesperson Rulleska Singh said 18 people had been injured but defended the police’s shooting of pregnant women.

“Yesterday some of the occupants on the land were using women and children as human shields.

“Law enforcement officers were also attacked with bricks and stones, necessitating the use of a water cannon and rubber bullets” Singh said.

She said the city had plans to build houses on that land and would not allow land invasions.

http://www.iol.co.za/capeargus/land-grab-not-political-1.1070082

‘Land grab not political’

May 17 2011 at 12:02pm

NATASHA PRINCE

Staff Reporter

ONE OF the leaders of a group which has illegally occupied city-owned land in Tafelsig insists that the move is “not a political stunt”.

Yesterday marked a second day of violent clashes between members of the Mitchells Plain Backyarders Association and city law enforcement officials after members of the association moved on to the Swartklip Sports Field, which is owned by the city.

The group started erecting structures and tents on the field and on Sunday the city’s Anti-Land Invasion Unit moved in to begin dismantling these.

The land invaders flung rocks and bottles to keep officers at bay, and law enforcement officers and the metro police fired rubber bullets and water

Protesters scramble out of the way of a city law enforcement vehicle, flinging rocks as they go, during a second day of clashes at the Swartklip Sports Field.

There were similar scenes at the field yesterday.

City spokesman Pieter Cronje told the Cape Argus just before 9am today that approximately 80 new structures had been built overnight.

“The police and city staff are on the way to the scene,” he reported.

He said they had heard claims that the actions had been politically motivated – this from various sources, through various channels, as they negotiated a solution to the issue.

But he stressed that the city was not alleging this and that these allegations remained unproven.

Mayor Dan Plato’s spokeswoman, Rulleska Singh, said the mayor had received “allegations of political motivation from members of the community and has requested that it be investigated”.

But Sulaiman Stellenboom, the co-ordinator of the Mitchells Plain People’s Forum, which is supporting the Backyarders Association, said the organisations had been fighting with the city about housing and other issues since March.

“I disagree with (allegations of) it being an election stunt because we have had several meetings and it’s because they can’t face the community. It’s not a political thing,” Stellenboom said yesterday.

“What’s happening is that the sports field is becoming a dumping site, so they might as well give us that land for housing,” he said.

Stellenboom also serves as a member of the Mitchells Plain Community for Social Change, which caters for residents of various disadvantaged communities across the city.

He said they had marched to the local municipality in early March, when a memorandum was handed to the city with their grievances.

Several meetings had then been called with Plato, he said.

The mayor’s office confirmed that a memorandum had been received from the Mitchells Plain People’s Forum, not in their individual capacity, but as part of a larger alliance, and that a response to the memorandum was given.

The city said yesterday that portions of the land in Kapteinsklip and Swartklip which were invaded had been earmarked for formal housing and that the invasion and illegal structures could delay formal housing in the area.

Cronje said the city was considering development options in the Swartklip area that could include housing and sport.

The city also plans to erect formal houses in the Kapteinsklip but, he added, the project would take time as roads, water, electricity and sanitation had to be put in first.

“The city hopes that the occupation can be resolved and that planning for 1 200 housing units there can go ahead and that the essential bulk services can be installed,” he said.

The city said in a statement that if people continued to attempt to occupy the land and erect illegal structures, it would consider approaching the Western Cape High Court for an eviction order to evict them and to break the structures down.

“It will also ask the court to grant an interdict to stop any further structures and unlawful occupation.”

natasha.prince@inl.co.za

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/articleprog.aspx?id=65863

Mitchell’s Plain land invaders stand firm
Nathan Adams | Yesterday

Backyard dwellers illegally camping on an open field in Mitchell’s Plain on Monday vowed they would not move.

Organisers of the land invasion were arrested this past weekend following clashes with police.

Hundreds of families have built shacks on council-owned land in Mitchell’s Village claiming they have waited years for a home of their own.

There is little else for the backyard dwellers to do but mill around fires and stay warm.

One man said they are not squatters and they are entitled to land.

“They thought this was going to be a squatter camp that everybody will just come here. I told them it’s people who are on the waiting list. They’ve been waiting for houses for 30 years,” he said.

Lanai Titus said she moved because the promise of her own home is better than her current circumstances.

“I will take them there to go and see where we live. We also live there without electricity and without water,” she said.

The city’s anti-land invasion unit is planning to break down the illegal structures.

(Edited by Lindiwe Mlandu)

http://www.timeslive.co.za/specialreports/elections2011/article1071156.ece/Mitchells-Plain-residents-threaten-boycott

Mitchells Plain residents threaten boycott
May 16, 2011 11:25 PM | By PHILANI NOMBEMBE

Mitchells Plain, home to more than a million people, is considered to hold the swing vote in city.

The residents, who have dubbed themselves the Mitchells Plain Backyarders Association, moved on to portions of land in the Kapteinsklip and Swartklip and built shacks.

Yesterday, Terence Hosking, who claimed to be the spokesman for the group, urged them not to vote. He said group would put up more than 12000 people on the land.

“If they remove us from here no one is going to vote. One month ago [mayor Dan] Plato said the municipality has got land for 3000 houses but has no money to develop them. People have been waiting for houses for 30 years. We are going to put 12900 people from all over Mitchells Plain on this land,” said Hosking.

City authorities and police destroyed hundreds of shacks on Sunday, resulting in a clashes in which 18 people were injured. City officials claimed that the residents used women and children as shields when attacking police with bricks and stones.

Before lunchtime yesterday, smoke from burning tyres filled the sky, while some families and small children sat among pieces of metal sheets and wood on the vacant land, hoping to rebuild their shacks.

“We are explaining to them that it is their land now, 48 hours has passed. They [government] must give us services if they want votes,” said Hosking. Residents had already named the place New Horison.

But city spokesman Pieter Cronje said the land had been earmarked for formal housing and the invasion and “illegal structures” would delay development.

Cape Argus: Bricks, bullets fly in land grab

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/bricks-bullets-fly-in-land-grab-1.1069542

Bricks, bullets fly in land grab

There is a picture gallery here.

May 16 2011
By NATASHA PRINCE

An open field in Tafelsig turned into a war zone yesterday as a group of land invaders pelted police and city law enforcers with rocks and bottles.

The officers retaliated by firing rubber bullets and blasting the invaders with a water cannon to bring them under control.

The group, who call themselves the Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders’ Association, moved on to the Swartklip Sports Field on Saturday.

They built makeshift shacks and set up tents on the field, saying it should belong to them.

Yesterday, members of the city’s Anti-Land Invasion Unit tore down 338 structures and 100 tents before they were forced to retreat.

In tit-for-tat moves, the land invaders continued to move in to rebuild their structures, only for them to be torn down again by a phalanx of policemen, flanked by a water cannon and heavily protected metro police officers.

Residents claimed they had been pepper sprayed, and insisted that metro police had used “live ammunition”, a claim the city strenuously denied.

City of Cape Town spokeswoman Kylie Hatton said rubber bullets had been fired several times, but officers had “definitely not” used live ammunition.

She said two law enforcement officers and a metro police officer were injured.

Police said today 14 people had been arrested after yesterday’s clashes.

Yesterday, residents showed the Cape Argus injuries they said were sustained during the day’s skirmishes. Some said they had been hit by bottles and rocks, and others by rubber bullets.

The water cannon blasted the land invaders with coloured water, marking them for later identification.

This morning, some of the invaders, many of whom had slept in tents on the field last night, were slowly rebuilding their structures.

Cooking fires were dotted across the field, and people started their day by brewing coffee in small pans.

Some said they were uncertain of their next move, with others saying they would try to keep the police at bay without using violence.

Hatton said the area was quiet this morning.

This weekend, another group of people also invaded a plot of land in nearby Kapteinsklip, and city law enforcement officers moved in swiftly to dismantle 75 structures, Hatton said. Building materials were removed from that site.

The plot of land in Tafelsig is city-owned.

“Residents have been trying to illegally occupy the land and we as landowners have the right to prevent the illegal occupation,” Hatton said.

As the invasion started this weekend, members of the Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders’ Association cordoned off “plots” on the Tafelsig field using rope and sticks.

They also assigned erf numbers to people, saying these had been given to them by the council.

But Hatton said the numbers were “certainly not sanctioned by council”.

“We found that the people themselves marked off and pegged the numbers to the area,” she said.

Tempers started flaring yesterday as the Anti-Land Invasion teams moved in to pull down structures on the demarcated “plots”.

One man, Nasief Abrahams, swore as he watched his tent pulled down and shouted: “They don’t do anything for us but they want our vote!”

Abrahams said he, his wife and their two children had been living in a friend’s backyard for seven years.

“All we ever wanted was for the government to offer us a piece of land with electricity and water… they have the budget for other projects. Why can’t they invest in a project that will help us get the land?” he said.

He said he had spent all Saturday night in his tent on the field and he would not go to work because he felt he was fighting a just cause.

“I will keep fighting until I get what I want… we’re going to be back here (today) until we’ve got our land,” he said.

Terence Hosking, spokesman for the Mitchell’s Plain Backyarders’ Association, said they would stay on the land “until the day of death”.

He said it was unfair that backyarders in Tafelsig were paying between R500 and R1 500 to live in people’s yards.

“We have been negotiating with them (the city) and now we’ve said enough is enough.” – Cape Argus

natasha.prince@inl.co.za

Cape Argus: 100 homes razed as fire rips through Site B

http://www.capeargus.co.za/?fSectionId=3127&fArticleId=5760928

100 homes razed as fire rips through Site B
Sleeping seven-year-old girl dies in fire that razed her Valhalla Park wendy house this morning

December 08, 2010 Edition 2

JASON WARNER and |NATASHA PRINCE Staff Reporters

HUNDREDS of Khayelitsha residents have been left homeless after a fire ripped through the township, destroying nearly 100 shacks over the course of several hours.

Despite widespread damage, no injuries or deaths were reported.

But elsewhere, a seven-year-old girl died when the backyard wendy house in which she was sleeping, in Agnes Road, Valhalla Park, burned down today – with the house in front.

Officials said they suspected the fire had started in the wendy house and spread to the main house. It also damaged a neighbour’s house and wendy house. No other injuries were reported.

The girl’s parents are undergoing counselling.

Cape Town Fire and Rescue spokesman Theo Layne said the Khayelitsha fire had broken out at about 6.15pm yesterday in Khayelitsha’s QQ Section in Site B.

Six fire trucks and 34 firefighters were dispatched and it took them nearly five hours to bring the fire under control.

Today, several people began clearing the rubble and preparing to rebuild their homes.

Nomalizwo Mzamo, chairwoman of the QQ Section creche, inspected the charred remains of the cr?che this morning.

A visibly emotional Mzamo said she had no idea where the 82 children enrolled at the cr?che would go to today. “I am heartbroken,” she said.

Many of the families who had been preparing to go to the Eastern Cape for the holidays said they were devastated by the loss of the gifts they had planned to take along.

Mthobeli Qona, who is the deputy president of abaHlali Basemjondolo in the Western Cape and who lives in in QQ Section, said the fire had started at a corner shack near the neighbouring Q-Section from where many QQ-Section residents run electric cables from a junction.

Many residents believed the fire had been caused by an electrical fault, he said.

Another problem, Qona said, was that the nearest tap was “a distance” away from the area, preventing residents from dousing flames.

AbaHlali member Victor Leeuw, who helped fight the blaze, blamed the government’s lack of service delivery for the residents’ losses.

The informal settlement had been in existence for 24 years and its residents should have been relocated long ago, he said. People were using illegal electrical connections because the government refused to electrify the area, which lay under overhead power lines, Leeuw said.

Meanwhile, another fire broke out at a popular city nightclub yesterday afternoon.

Firefighters were called to the Vudu Lounge in Bree Street at 5.45pm. After almost two hours, the blaze was brought under control and no injuries were reported.

Yesterday the city praised firefighters for preventing Monday’s blaze on Signal Hill burning out of control.

“The city’s Fire and Rescue Services responded to a vegetation fire on the slopes of Signal Hill (on Monday) at 1.34pm. The fire raged in the area below the picnic and parking area on the top of Signal Hill, on the Sea Point side?

“Fire and Rescue Services had seven fire engines and three water tankers on scene and were assisted by two helicopters contracted to SANParks. The city’s firefighters were assisted on the ground by staff employed for the fire season, as well as by crews from SANParks and their contracted Working on Fire teams.

“Fire-fighting efforts were hampered by very strong wind conditions, difficult accessibility and a lack of water supply?”

Chief fire officer Ian Schnetler commended “staff, and the supporting agencies, on a job well done”.

Cape Argus: Neighbours’ loos for hire

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=&art_id=vn20100729132844354C241597

Neighbours’ loos for hire

By Natasha Prince and Bronwynne Jooste
Staff Reporters

Some Khayelitsha residents have to pay up to R10 each time they want to use the toilets at their neighbours’ homes because they don’t have their own ablution facilities.

Residents in QQ Section in Site B, who live in shacks, fork out between 50c and R10 to their neighbours who live in formal houses.

In another section of the city’s sprawling township, Site C, residents have to relieve themselves on a stretch of grass in full view of passing cars on the N2.

There are toilets nearby in Site C, but some of these are locked by individual residents who hold the keys, while others are broken, damaged or overflowing with human waste.

Using the stretch of grass as a toilet is dangerous: residents say that they are mugged as they walk to the area. One man was stabbed in the face and robbed of his cellphone earlier this year.

When the Cape Argus visited the area this week, human faeces littered the grassy area and the stench was overpowering.

It is not only adults who use the field as a toilet. Parents fear that their children are risking their lives.

Residents who use the area regularly said they had few options because the closest toilets were too far from their homes.

Some said they walked to a neighbouring area in Site C to use toilets provided by the City of Cape Town.

Thokoza Thulumani, who accompanied her two young daughters when they needed to use the grassy patch, said she “did not feel right” about using the field.

“Sometimes these little children want to run into the street (the N2); it’s not safe for them,” she said.

Mzimasi Kese, 31, said “having to go” in the open made him “feel bad”.

“I don’t feel right because so many people driving past in their cars can see you going.”

Kese said sometimes people brought toilet paper while others used newspaper which they softened by rubbing.

There are 12 concrete flush toilets in Site C.

About six of these are locked and others have been vandalised or are blocked and have plumbing defects.

Nomfusi Jezile, who uses these toilets, said the keys to the locked toilets were kept by some residents and could be obtained when requested.

“It’s better when they keep the keys because the toilets are cleaner and the children can’t play in them,” she said.

Ward councillor Nontsomi Billie said the city had the toilets for the area, but that there was no land on which to erect them.

She said some people in the area used the portable toilet system.

“If the toilets are not enough, they (the residents) should tell the street committee members who report it to me and I contact the city and processes are put in place,” she said.

Cape Argus: Nine die in horror fire

http://www.capetimes.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20100707134742898C478362

Nine die in horror fire
7 July 2010, 14:47

By Fouzia van der Fort and Natasha Prince
Staff Reporters

Five young children – one of them a six-month-old baby – and four adults have died after their home caught alight in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

Two sisters, their boyfriends and their children were trapped in their Lingelethu-West home when the fire started at about 2am – and frantic relatives and neighbours were unable to rescue them as the door was bolted shut on the inside.

Sisters Marche, 30, and Nomampondo Mdla, 26; Marche’s boyfriend, Bulelani Nqundwana, 38, and Nomampondo’s boyfriend, David Khoboka, 33, and the sisters’ five children died in the fire.

Nomampondo’s eight-year-old daughter Asimahle Mdla, and Marche’s sons – Aviwe, 5, Luxolo, 4, and Spumzo, who was six months old – and daughter Andisiwe, 3, also did not survive the blaze.

Marche and Nomampondo’s brother, 22-year-old Lufefe Mdla, said he believed the fire had been caused by candles which his sisters were using to light their home after their prepaid electricity meter “exploded” about a month ago.

Mdla, who lives in a house in front of his sisters’ home, said he had been woken in the early hours by neighbours who told him the house was on fire.

He knocked on the door of his sisters’ house and looked through the window and seen flames.

He told the Cape Argus he had tried to open the door, but found that it was locked. “I couldn’t do anything.”

Mdla then phoned his mother, who called police and fire services to the scene.

Neighbours were unable to open any of the house’s doors, because one was chained shut and a crowbar was keeping the other closed. Firefighters had to break the door down.

Lingelethu-West police spokeswoman Warrant Officer Siphokazi Mawisa said police had been contacted at about 2.30am.

Cape Town Fire and Rescue Services’ Theo Lane said two fire tenders, two water tenders, one rescue vehicle and about 18 firefighters and rescue personnel had been dispatched to the scene.

The fire was extinguished quickly, with the last vehicle leaving just before 3.40am. Police were still on the scene at about 8am, carrying out a final check inside the structure, which was still standing.

Mdla said his sisters were “always together”. He said they were very close, and had been good friends. He had visited them every day after work and the siblings had eaten meals together.

He was going to move in with his mother for a few days, Lufefe said.

David Khoboka’s sister, Boniswa, said her mother, who lives in the Eastern Cape, had been taken to hospital after hearing the news of her son’s death. “We don’t know yet what we are going to do. We waited from 3am to make sure whether they were dead or still alive.”

City of Cape Town Disaster Risk Management spokesperson Wilfred Solomons-Johannes said the fire had started when a candle fell on to a plastic chair. “We encourage people to put out their candles, open flames and lamps at night before going to sleep,” he said.

* This article was originally published on page 1 of The Cape Argus on July 07, 2010