Category Archives: newspaper_story

Sowetan: Shack dwellers threaten to go on strike for a week

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2010/09/15/shack-dwellers-threaten-to-go-on-strike-for-a-week

Shack dwellers threaten to go on strike for a week
15-Sep-2010 | Francis Hweshe |

SHACK dwellers are planning a week-long national strike to highlight their “appalling living conditions”.

“If public workers have done it because they are underpaid, surely we also can do it”

The strike will begin in two weeks’ time if Minister of Human Settlements Tokyo Sexwale and Western Cape housing MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela do not respond to a list of grievances by housing lobby group Abahlali BaseMjondolo (ABM).

The shack dwellers told Sowetan they would hand the memorandum to Sexwale and Madikizela today.

“If they fail to respond, people will take to the streets nationwide and create chaos to expose the failures of the Ministry of Human Settlements to provide decent housing,” ABM Western Cape chairperson Mzonke Poni said.

Poni said all informal settlements across the country would take part in the protest action, which would also involve the Landless People’s Movement, Eastern Cape-based Unemployed People’s Movement and students from various universities.

Part of the week-long strike will culminate in a march on Parliament.

“In our view there is no other way to expose the failures of the government except by taking to the streets,” Poni said.

“They really need to be pushed. If public workers have done it because they are underpaid, surely we also can do it.

“We want to create chaos.

“Our living conditions are appalling. We are affected by floods in winter and fires in summers.

“I thought after the 1994 elections things would change but nothing has changed,” he said.

The housing backlog in the Western Cape is about 500,000 yet the government only builds about 18,000 houses a year, Poni said.

Madikizela’s spokesperson, Zalisile Mbali, warned that the protest must not turn violent.

He denied that the Western Cape government would never manage to build houses for everyone.

“We can only assist about 16,000 households a year with a house on a serviced site,” Mbali said.

“We must increase the families we assist to enhance their living conditions every year by increasing the provision of serviced sites.

“This we can do by upgrading informal settlements and developing serviced sites on green fields projects.”

Witness: Bishop of Natal honoured in Germany

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global%5B_id%5D=30227

Bishop of Natal honoured in Germany
31 Oct 2009
Julia Denny-Dimitriou

THE Anglican Bishop of Natal, Bishop Rubin Phillip, received a prestigious international award in Germany last night.

In a ceremony in the Bremen Town Hall, Phillip received the 2009 International Bremen Peace Award in recognition of his work for “justice, peace and integrity of creation”. He received the award in the category for “persons in the public arena, who have shown sustainable and courageous commitment for peace and justice, especially in the ecumenical spirit of the reconciliation process”. He was accompanied by his wife, Rose.

Australian Susan Gilbey, who campaigns for the rights of asylum seekers, won the award for “an unknown peace worker”.

The award for “exemplary project work” went to Bulgarian organisations Animus and the Pulse Foundation for their work with women victims of human trafficking and forced prostitution in Western Europe.

The award includes 15?000 euros (about R170?000), which will go towards building a pre-primary school in Mpophomeni. Phillip said he and his wife are very committed to pre-primary education.

Phillip is chairman of the KZN Christian Council (KZNCC), which nominated him for the award. KZNCC CEO the Reverend Phumzile Zondi-Mabizela said the award is “fitting recognition of the bishop’s contribution to peace in Southern Africa and KwaZulu-Natal”.

“His activity is well documented, from the time of his involvement in the struggle against apartheid. He is on record as an independent prophetic voice at a time where the religious and the political leadership in southern Africa seem to be blunt and callous on matters of peace, justice, human rights, the plight of the poor and the integrity of creation.”

Zondi-Mabizela said Phillip worked actively to help victims of xenophobia and homeless people in the province, and is outspoken on human rights violations in Zimbabwe.

In April 2008, he and Paddy Kearney, executive of the Diakonia Council of Churches, got a court interdict to stop a Chinese ship headed for Durban harbour from unloading a consignment of weapons on their way to Zimbabwe.

More recently, he has championed the cause of Abahlali baseMjondolo, the body that represents the Kennedy Road informal settlers.

He called on the political leadership of KZN to “acknowledge the legitimacy of as Abahlali base Mjondolo as a democratically elected, non-aligned movement of the people and work with them and not against them”.

Phillip was a member of the Black Consciousness Movement and was deputy president of the South African Students’ Organisation (Saso) in 1969, when Steve Biko was president.

He was placed under house arrest from 1973 to 1976.

Launched in 2003 by the Threshold Foundation in Bremen, Germany, this award recognises individuals who, and organisations that “have the courage to cross thresholds” and display “exemplary commitment to justice, peace and integrity of creation”. It is awarded every two years in three different categories that cover the fields of reconciliation, human rights, countering racism, social justice, integrity of creation, and cross-cultural or cross-religious communication.

The Threshold Foundation was founded in 1979 by Ruth-Christa and Dirk Heinrichs, a stevedoring entrepreneur

Cape Times: The Western Cape housing crisis can be solved

http://www.capetimes.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5121142

an emergency effort is needed
The Western Cape housing crisis can be solved

August 12, 2009 Edition 1

Martin Legassick

It is good news that Tokyo Sexwale and Helen Zille have decided to bury the hatchet on the petty squabbling between the ANC and DA (largely, let it be said, initiated by the ANC) over the N2 Gateway project and land allocation in the province.

The spat has hampered housing delivery in the province. We are now told “the three spheres of government are to sit around one table to decide on the future of the project.” (“Sexwale, Zille and city to decide on N2 Gateway,” August 10).

But Sexwale, Zille, Dan Plato and their officials would be making a big mistake if they believed the future could be settled without involving beneficiary communities, through their representative committees, at the decision-making table.

Unlike his predecessor as housing minister, Sexwale has at least already gone on walkabouts in N2 Gateway Phase 1 and the Joe Slovo informal settlement. But walk-abouts are not the same as meaningful involvement in decision-making.

In the past “consultation” or “negotiation” meant for officials merely informing beneficiaries of dogmatically set plans without any intention of altering them.

What needs to happen is that the past needs to be rectified and the future of N2 Gateway planned with the beneficiaries rather than over their heads.

There is a crisis in housing nationally and in the Western Cape. In Cape Town alone, there is a backlog of 400 000 houses, which is increasing by 18-20 000 a year, with only 8-9 000 houses built a year.

On that basis, the housing backlog will never disappear. It is time for some bold and imaginative thinking.

Let us recall that the Auditor-General’s special report on N2 Gateway found:

# Parliament still has not passed the legislation underlying the project, though it was started in 2004;

# The business plan for the project was not finalised before the start and was not available for audit;

# Sufficient land was not secured before the start;

# There was non-compliance with the prescribed requirement of listing the proposed beneficiaries in the final business plan;

# Documentation was not consistent on qualifying criteria for proposed beneficiaries, especially the monthly household income requirement;

# Affordable housing was not provided in Phase 1 for the target market identified (Joe Slovo informal settlement residents);

# There was considerable “fruitless and wasteful expenditure” on the project – Parliament’s Scopa estimates up to R2 billion;

# The initial building consortium (Cyberia Technologies) was sixth on the tender evaluation list, its appointment was not properly authorised and it had no contract;

# Thubelisha Homes was appointed in 2006 to replace Cyberia without proper tender procedures or a contract. (Thubelisha has since gone bankrupt, replaced by the National Housing Agency).

Deficiencies in construction of the Phase 1 flats mentioned in the Auditor-General’s report include:

# The certificate of completion for the building contract issued by the principal agent was issued erroneously;

# Compliance with registration and inspection procedures identified in various regulations could not be verified;

# Instances were identified where “as built” specifications did not comply with minimum specifications for social housing;

# There were deviations from contract specifications;

# The large public stormwater canal constituted a foul health hazard; and

# Site inspections revealed numerous cracks in the walls and floors, peeling paint, doors that were not fitted properly, loose fittings, uncovered drain pipes and blocked drains.

This amounts to a morass of officially committed illegality. The beneficiaries have borne the consequences and need redress.

For example, residents in Phase 1 have held a rent boycott for two years because of the defective housing and higher rates than they had been told to expect.

They are being asked to pay exorbitant rentals to make up for the cost overruns and corruption in the construction of the flats.

This is unfair. Recent Thubelisha head Prince Xanthi Sigcau has claimed that residents in the area were aware of the rentals when they moved in. But they moved in during a period of the transition in management from Cyberia to Thubelisha – well before Sigcau appeared on the scene.

The residents claim Cyberia announced a rental rise from R350-R500 to R650-R1 050 without explanation and pressured them to sign contracts without even reading them.

Phase 1 residents should have their rentals reduced to a mutually agreeable, affordable level.

There are reports that the management of Phase 1 is to be given to the Cape Town Community Housing Company (CTCHC), which since 1999 has been embroiled in complaints, about defective housing quality and exorbitant rentals, from tenants in nine villages.

Moreover, why must CTCHC, with its appalling record, manage these flats? Why can’t the tenants assume co-operative management?

In addition, why can’t some arrangement be made to transpose rents to reasonable bond payments, so that residents can eventually own their homes rather than rent for life?

These ideas have been considered by the representative committee.

They are the sort of ideas that Sexwale, Zille, Plato and their officials could consider implementing.

The same applies to the residents of the Joe Slovo informal settlement, still under threat of forced removal to Delft, from which barely 12 percent of them will be able to return on the existing N2 Gateway plans.

They are victims of the incompetence of Thubelisha.

The Breaking New Ground housing policy, conceived in 2004, was supposed to break with apartheid-style city planning (blacks to the periphery) and practise upgrading in situ. Both provisions are being violated in the case of the residents of Joe Slovo.

Two things need to be considered here – firstly, finding land in Langa, where they can be placed temporarily rather than in Delft (originally, in 2004/5 sites were identified in Langa/Epping but business owners threatened court action.

These owners could be persuaded otherwise by Sexwale and Zille.

Secondly. higher-density housing – even if this involves, as Plato has suggested, buildings that rise over several storeys.

Medium-density housing is being considered in other townships.

Both ideas have been considered by the representative committee in Joe Slovo, and they need to be brought into the planning process.

The failures of N2 Gateway are largely of an ANC government (the DA was excluded from N2 Gateway shortly after taking office in the City of Cape Town). But both the DA and the ANC need to reconsider their housing policies.

The occupation of N2 Gateway housing by Delft back yarders in December 2007 and the recent occupations of vacant municipal land in Macassar, Kraaifontein and elsewhere by equally desperate back yarders stems from the housing crisis in the city – with the backlog increasing every year.

The city is again threatening to evict Delft back yarders from the shacks they have built on Symphony Way, just as it tore down the shacks of the Macassar occupants – an illegal act, covered up by the city applying resources superior to those of the residents.

The Delft back yarders are all eligible for N2 Gateway houses, but when they submitted their applications Thubelisha lost them.

They engaged in a protest at a handover of N2 Gateway homes and Sigcau promised to deliver new forms but never did so. Now the city wants to condemn them to the prison-like temporary relocation area in Blikkiesdorp.

The ANC may be imagining, in vain, that all informal settlements can be eliminated by 2014. It is equally foolish for the DA to try to implement a policy of zero tolerance for land occupations.

Until sufficient housing can be provided, space must be allowed for the swelling urban population to build shacks on vacant land.

It is incumbent on public bodies to provide such space. Otherwise the city will face overcrowding, resulting in more crime, drug abuse, and the abuse of women and children – all of which are against the policies of the DA and ANC.

And while Sexwale, Zille, Plato and their officials are reconsidering housing policy – in conjunction with the beneficiaries of N2 Gateway and others – they might consider something else. 475 000 jobs have been lost this year due to the recession, adding to the more than 30 percent unemployment rate (including those discouraged from seeking work.)

Why not organise, through an expanded public works programme, emergency training for the unemployed (many have inadequate homes) men and women in bricklaying, carpentry, plumbing and so on so that they can be employed to build the much-needed houses?

Cosatu should put its weight behind such a plan.

The current housing budget is only 1.5 percent of GDP as opposed to the developing country norm of 5-6 percent.

With an emergency effort, spearheaded by the presidency, resourced through the treasury (Zuma has promised R2.4bn to retrain the retrenched), and motivated by the beneficiaries, the nationally needed 2.2m houses could be built quickly.

# Legassick is Emeritus Professor at the University of the Western Cape and is active in the field of housing.

Business Day: ‘Know your rights’ drive kicks off

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A724355

Top Stories

Posted to the web on: 11 March 2008
‘Know your rights’ drive kicks off
Sibongakonke Shoba

THE public service and administration department’s campaign to educate the public about their service rights was widely welcomed by nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) and researchers, but organisations that joined in service delivery protests said it would not make a difference.

Public Service and Administration Minister Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi launched the campaign in Johannesburg yesterday.

The department has produced a handbook to inform the public about the services they are entitled to, and who to contact if they are not receiving the services. The campaign is to include road shows and radio mini-dramas. The department plans to use community development workers, NGOs and community-based organisation to create awareness about the right to services

Patricia Martins, spokeswoman for children’s rights advocacy group the Alliance for Children’s Entitlement to Social Security (Acess), said any public awareness could be useful. “The critical thing is how the information is delivered. It should be accessible, well distributed and written in a language that people understand,” she said.

The campaign would be useful as Acess had found that many people, especially the poor, did not know what government services they were entitled to, she said.

Kevin Allen, MD of web-based data and intelligence service Municipal IQ, said any attempt to improve access to information should be welcomed. “Making government systems easier to understand is important because a lot of our people are not clear about how to access services such as grants and IDs. It could have a significant impact.”

Allen said the initiative was only part of a solution and did not mean that service delivery would improve. “It does not need to be confused with the need to provide services to everyone.”

But Mnikelo Ndabankulu a spokesman for Abahlali Basemjondolo, a Durban shack- dwellers’ movement, was less optimistic. He said that the campaign would not make a difference as many people were aware of their rights and were already exercising them.

“It could only work if councillors and mayors prioritised people’s needs instead of 2010 projects. Our leaders have forgotten about the need to build houses and are concentrating on building stadiums,” Ndabankulu said.

The public would continue exercising their right to protests when officials ignored their grievances, he said.

Moleketi said the campaign was not a response to delivery protests that took place countrywide last year. She said it was part of a campaign that started in 1998 with the adoption of the white paper titled Batho Pele.

“It is part of that ongoing process that will also deal with the problems facing those communities (where protests took place),” said Fraser-Moleketi.

Meanwhile, residents of Emfuleni municipality in Gauteng and Klaarwater in Durban staged protests against poor service delivery yesterday.

Mercury: Everyone needs a stake in our society

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4287402

The Mercury

Columnists

Everyone needs a stake in our society

Across the country, housing has become the single largest cause of conflict between the state and poor communities

March 05, 2008 Edition 1

Imraan Buccus

Last week shocking images of the police shooting at Cape Town’s poorest citizens were beamed around the world as the people of Delft were attacked. The damage to the city and the country caused by these images that looked like a flashback to the 1980s is incalculable.

South Africa once had a reputation as a haven of respect for human rights. People came from all over the world to learn from us. Those days are over. The atrocious rates of violence against women, xenophobia, threats to academic freedom, press freedom and the independence of the judiciary, not to mention the widespread corruption of the business and political elite, have robbed us of the moral high ground we briefly held after the negotiated transition.

The tragedy is that the disaster in Delft was widely predicted and could so easily have been avoided. Top-down planning with the aim of removing the poor from the city in advance of the 2010 World Cup had become almost farcical. The Western Cape provincial housing department decided to move 6 000 people from the Joe Slovo shack settlement near the airport (where tourists could see them) to Delft, 30km away, where they would be well hidden from tourists. But the people from Joe Slovo refused to accept forced removal to Delft and the people from Delft were furious that the houses built in their community and promised to them would now be forced on people from outside who didn’t want them. The people from Delft, with the full support of the people from Joe Slovo, occupied the houses in Delft.

The police were sent in to evict the occupiers violently. More than 20, including three children, ended up in hospital. But the police violence has hardly resolved the problem. People in Joe Slovo are still refusing the forced relocation and people in Delft are still homeless. All that has been achieved is that the Delft houses are now empty.

Global experience shows that developing countries need to dedicate between 6% and 10% of their national budgets to housing if they want to meet the needs of their people and avoid major social conflict.

The average developing country devotes 5% of its national budget to housing. Here in South Africa we are spending only 1.5% of the national purse on housing.

Every year the housing backlog grows. Moreover the houses that are being built are largely entrenching apartheid spatial segregation. The apartheid system was condemned for building bleak townships on the urban periphery. But post apartheid housing “delivery” continues to build bleak townships on the urban periphery rather than to develop integrated, compact, vibrant cities with open democratic public spaces like parks, sports and cultural facilities, libraries and so on.

It is therefore unsurprising that across the country housing has become the single largest cause of conflict between the state and poor communities. We have not been immune from this here in Durban. In November 2005 and again in September 2007 images of police shooting at shack dwellers in Clare Estate were also beamed around the world. It is common knowledge that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are both investigating human rights abuses in Durban.

A study of developing countries that have had to confront housing crises reveals three basic responses.

The high road begins with a recognition of the problem, followed by serious budgetary commitments and the creation of a genuine planning partnership between government and the poor. This is the route that cities such as Naga in the Philippines and Curitiba in Brazil have taken.

This kind of bottom-up development creates safe and just cities in which the whole population has a stake. It creates the foundation for genuinely inclusive and sustainable development.

The middle road is denial. Denial of a housing crisis is often accompanied by massive expenditure on prestige projects such as stadia, conference centres, waterfronts, international events and so on in the vain hope that these pockets of extravagance will detract from the poverty and misery slowly engulfing the city.

Baltimore and Cape Town are infamous examples of this approach. Investment in prestige projects and events does not trickle down to the poor and this approach inevitably leads to radically segregated cities with wealth and opulence on one side of the razor wire and poverty and desperation on the other. These cities will never be safe cities.

The low road is to stigmatise the poor and their housing solutions (often by calling them slums) as a threat to society and to make poverty a security issue. Harare is of course the most notorious contemporary example of this descent into what ultimately becomes a war against the poor.

In KwaZulu-Natal the passing of the Elimination of Slums Act last year was a clear indication that this is the direction that the provincial government is now looking towards.

In general South Africa seems to be veering between the middle road and the low road. We can only hope that the tragic events in Delft will be a wake-up call to the state and civil society.

If we do not begin to build just and inclusive cities our future will look a lot more like Delft – bleak, desperate and violent.

For years now the organisations of the poor have been warning us about the direction that our country is taking. We need to begin to listen. We need, fundamentally, to rethink the way we do things and we need to do it urgently.

The cost of continuing on the current path will be ruination. It is essential that we begin to build a society in which everyone has a meaningful stake, in which everyone has basic needs met and in which everyone can express views freely.