Category Archives: No Land! No House! No Vote!

Launch at Book Lounge of “No Land! No House! No Vote!” and picket by Blikkiesdorp in front of Parliament

Launch at Book Lounge of “No Land! No House! No Vote!” and picket by Blikkiesdorp in front of Parliament

Picket by Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers and Blikkiesdorp Residents

* Where? at Parliament (Cnr Roeland St & Plein St)
* When? 12noon–1pm on the 16th of May
* Why? To promote their new book and to protest against the horrible conditions in Tin Town and the government’s failure to honor their agreement to engage with us on our struggle for housing. No Dignity! No Vote!
* For more information on our struggle, please contact Aunty Tilla @ 0764772508 and Sarita @ 0764772508

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From there, the authors will walk over to:

* The Book Lounge at 71 Roeland St
* at 5:30 for 6 – entrance is free
* RSVP to booklounge@gmail.com or 021 462 2425 or RSVP on Facebook

The Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers will be holding a book launch to present to the public our new acclaimed anthology: No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way

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Acclaim/:

“A compelling testimony to the ingenuity of people to organise themselves and invent newer forms of struggle.”
– Issa Shivji, University of Dar es Salaam

“An extraordinary collection of writings from the spirit of resilience and strength of the collective which lay bare the betrayal of the people in post-­??apartheid South Africa.”
– Sokari Ekine, author and award-winning blogger

“This anthology is both testimony and poetry … The stories blew me away.”
– Raj Patel, bestselling writer and activist

No Land! No House! No Vote! Summit (Our votes are conditional)

No Land! No House! No Vote! Summit (Our votes are conditional)

On the 14th of May 2011 the No Land! No House! No Vote! Summit will be held at Mandela Park, by the Mandela Park Backyard Dwellers.

While the Democratic Alliance will be hosting it's final National Campaign Rally at the O.R. Thambo community hall on the 14th May 2011, Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape will be joining the Mandela Park Back yard dwellers in their No Land! No House! No Vote! Summit.

ABM WC would like to appeal to many voters who have not yet decided to vote, not to sell their votes to any political parties. We are saying our vote is precious and is not for sale and that our vote is conditional.

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No House! No Dignity! No Vote! Why we wont vote on the 18th of May

No House! No Dignity! No Vote!
Why we wont vote on the 18th of May

Join us at KwaMlamli’s as we host a show, exhibition, and discussion on the grassroots politics of the No Vote position. We say we are sick and tired of choosing between Helen Zuma and Jacob Zille!

Venue >> KwaMlamli’s #15 NY146 in Gugulethu
Time >> 14h00 for 15h00
Date >> 14th of May
Directions >> Contact Zipho 0822541814 or Mncedisi 0785808646
RSVP >> on Facebook

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Featuring >> Underground hip-hop by Soundz of the South

Featuring >> Political art by the Gugulective

Featuring >> The authors of the book No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way

Featuring >> Activists from the Gugulethu Anti-Eviction Campaign
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Entrance is Free. Books, food and drinks available for purchase.

Cape Argus: The big job that awaits new mayor

When the DA say that it will take 30 years to clear the housing backlog they mean the backlog as it currently stands but it is rapidly increasing. The bottom line is that the DA has no plan to provide housing for all in Cape Town and that if things continue as they do many people will live their whole lives in shacks. The situation is the same in Durban. When the politicians demand that people be ‘patient’ they are demanding that people accept defeat and betrayal.

http://www.iol.co.za/capeargus/the-big-job-that-awaits-new-mayor-1.1066205

The big job that awaits new mayor

Blikkiesdorp residents say they won’t vote in next week’s elections because their living conditions haven’t changed despite promises made by politicians in election campaigns in previous years.

CLAYTON BARNES

Political Writer

A TOUGH task awaits the political party that takes control of the City of Cape Town after next Wednesday’s municipal elections.

And at the top of the new mayor’s to-do list will be the city’s housing crisis, with an estimated backlog of close to half a million.

Other challenges include:

* Developing and implementing a plan for Cape Town’s more than 240 informal settlements.

* Redeveloping Blikkiesdorp, a temporary relocation area (TRA) in Delft, or moving the area’s more than 7 000 residents to a new site.

* Ensuring job creation and small business opportunities. Enclosing more than 1 316 toilets in Makhaza, Khayelitsha.

* Ensuring that the city’s multibillion-rand integrated rapid transit (IRT) system and the Cape Town Stadium are sustainable, and that the IRT project is rolled out to where the majority of the city’s public transport commuters live.

The city’s housing waiting list stands at 400 000. This excludes several thousand backyarders and street dwellers who are not registered on the city’s database.

In Blikkiesdorp, there is only one toilet and tap for every five metal structures.

In 2007, the Western Cape High Court ruled that 20 000 Joe Slovo residents relocate to Blikkiesdorp so that Joe Slovo could be developed. Most of those residents are still staying in the metal structures today.

Since its establishment four years ago, the sandy, fenced site with grim rows of grey metal shacks has become a home to evictees, vagrants and victims of xenophobic violence.

A few hundred shacks once housed families from Delft who had illegally invaded and occupied homes that formed part of the controversial N2 Gateway housing project in 2007.

Today there are more than 1 600 structures in Blikkiesdorp with electricity and communal toilets and water taps.

ANC mayoral candidate Tony Ehrenreich said it was a “disgrace” that the city continued to keep people living in a “concentration camp” when there was government-owned land available in Constantia.

“When the ANC takes over the city, we will build low-cost houses in Constantia and other areas where the government owns land,” said Ehrenreich.

DA metro chairman and social development mayoral committee member Grant Pascoe said Blikkiesdorp came about through an “irresponsible act” by a former DA councillor, but that the city was doing its best to provide services to the area.

The former councillor Pascoe referred to is Frank Martin who, in December, 2007, led the invasion of unfinished N2 Gateway houses.

Deputy mayor and the city’s finance mayoral committee member Ian Neilson admitted that housing was the city’s biggest challenge.

He said it was impossible to expect any administration to address Cape Town’s housing backlog in five or 10 years.

“That is a 30-year project,” said Neilson. “We have to be honest. We will not adhere to the housing needs of everyone in a short period. But what we can do is provide services – water, sanitation, electricity and basic health care facilities.”

The city is expected to launch parts of phase 1A of the IRT from Blouberg to the city centre today.

ANC provincial chairman Marius Fransman said that should the ANC wrest control of the city from the DA, the party would assess the IRT strategy and reroute those buses to Mitchells Plain and Khayelitsha, “where it is needed the most”, and devise a route along the Klipfontein corridor into the city.

“The IRT along the Milnerton route will never be sustainable,” said Fransman. “The mere fact that they are launching the service in that area shows that the DA is only serving the wealthy. They have declared war on the poor.”

And the Makhaza toilet saga is also far from over.

The city is only likely to enclose the toilets after the elections, and residents vow they will not accept anything less than brick-enclosed toilets.

Last week, Judge Nathan Erasmus ordered the city to enclose the toilets, saying the city’s failure to enclose the facilities – part of the Silvertown housing project – violated seven sections of the constitution. However, the city says it is still studying the judgment and is still undecided as to how the toilets will be enclosed, and when.

The city said Judge Erasmus failed to spell out what kind of toilets needed to be built, and did not stipulate a time frame.

The ANC said the city should enclose the toilets before next Wednesday.

clayton.barnes@inl.co.za

Backyarders hold Anti-Vote Summit in Mandela Park in challenge to politicians courting their vote

http://mpbackyarders.org.za/2011/05/05/backyarders-hold-anti-vote-summit-in-mandela-park-in-challenge-to-politicians-courting-their-vote/

Backyarders hold Anti-Vote Summit in Mandela Park in challenge to politicians courting their vote

Venue: Andile Nhose in Mandela Park
Date: 14 May
Time: 9:00am – 12:30pm

The Mandela Park backyarders would like to invite you to an Anti-Vote Election Summit that will take place at Andile Nhose on the 14 May 2011 from 09:00am until 12:30pm.

The summit objective is to expose the housing crisis in Mandela Park that is leading to a serious attack and violation of people’s dignity. We challenge all political parties (all of whom have ignored us or attacked us) to explain why they think we should vote on the 18th of May.

– In Mandela Park, the City is still cutting our water and installing anti-poor pre-paid water meters. The City seems to have no intention to meet with the community to resolve this issue

– In Mandela Park, even though people qualify for housing subsidies from the state to settle their bills, there are still banks that ignore this and prevent us from using our subisidies. In the name of profit, they evict us instead of trying to negotiate a solution with residents.

– In Mandela Park, there still houses built in 2006 with no electricity. Phambili Nombane which is a subsidiary of Eskom refuses to electrify our houses. They are claiming that the developers did not pay for installation of electricity and therefore people should pay for themselves in order to get installation. This contradicts the housing code and is an illegal refusal of service delivery by Eskom.

We will have testimonies of victims of the above circumstances telling their painful suffering at the hands of our government and how this has affected their lives. We will then discuss why these circumstances have led the people of Mandela Park not to vote in upcoming local government elections.

We invite all government officials, bank officials, and media to come and attend. We challenge all politicians and political parties to explain why they have been ignoring our communities for 15 years and only coming to us during election-time.

Fore more information contact:

Loyiso: 0737662078
Slu:0736200781
Nomonde:0781862142