Category Archives: Pretoria News

Revolution Comes Like a Thief in the Night

http://www.sacsis.org.za/site/article/620.1

Revolution Comes Like a Thief in the Night

Life, ordinary life, is meant to follow certain rhythms. We grow, seasons change and we assume new positions in the world. When you have finished being a child you put away childish things and move on to the next stage of life. But there is a multitude of people in this world who cannot build a home, marry and care for their children and ageing parents. There is a multitude of people who are growing older as they remain stuck in an exhausting limbo, perhaps just managing to scrape together the rent for a backyard shack by selling tomatoes or cell phone chargers on some street.

Mohamed Bouazizi was one person amongst that multitude. He was born in 1984 in the Tunisian city of Sidi Bouzid. His father died on a Libyan construction site when Mohamed was three. He went to a one roomed village school but had to start working from the age of ten and abandoned school altogether in his late teens. In a city with an unemployment rate of 30% he couldn’t find work and began, like so many others, selling fruit and vegetables in the street. With the thousand rand that he made each month he looked after his mother, his uncle and his younger siblings. He was, incredibly, managing to pay for his sister, Samia, to study at university.

Since he was a child he had been harassed by the police who regularly confiscated his wheelbarrow and his wares. On the 17th of December last year he had just laid out one thousand and five hundred Rand to buy stock when a municipal official asked him for a bribe to keep his place on the street. He couldn’t pay it and so they turned his cart over, confiscated his scales, spat at him and slapped him. He went to the municipal offices to complain but no one would see him. He went outside, bought some petrol, poured it all over his body and set himself alight outside the municipal offices. Mohammed’s mother told a journalist that he didn’t kill himself because he was poor but because he had been humiliated. “It got to him deep inside, it hurt his pride.”

In 1961 Frantz Fanon wrote, from Tunisia, “The colonial world is a world cut into two….The town belonging to the colonized people, or at least the native town, the Negro village, the medina, the reservation, is a place of ill fame, peopled by men of evil repute. They are born there, it matters little where or how; they die there, it matters not how or where.”

Fifty years later cities are still divided into separate zones for those who count and those who don’t count. These days what distinguishes those who count from those who don’t is usually the possession of wealth. But the people spurned by society continue to be taken as a threat to society. Jacques Depelchin, the Congolese historian, writes, “the poor in Africa have replaced the Dark Continent as the symbolic conceptual definition of the obstacle to civilization.”

But of course Mohamed Bouzazi didn’t die the invisible death of the average poor person. When he set his own body alight he ignited the uprising that drove Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from power in Tunisia, toppled Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and then spread like a prairie fire to Algeria, Yemen, Iran and beyond. Revolt is leaping across the borders that are supposed to contain people while money is moved, dissidents rendered and intelligence exchanged.

These revolts may, like the European Revolutions of 1848 or the revolts against Stalinism in 1989, remake the world order in ways that we cannot yet predict.

Popular anger can be mobilised against innocent scapegoats like gay people in Uganda, Muslims in parts of India or migrants in South Africa. Revolutions are often rolled back, co-opted or even used to strengthen oppression by modernising it. The future of Tunisia, Egypt and all the other countries where people are now taking to the streets against the police and party thugs has yet to be written. Local elites and imperialism will certainly aim to do more of that writing than the ordinary people that have already brought down two dictatorships.

But whatever the eventual fate of the struggles in North Africa and the Middle East something has been done that cannot be undone. That something is the fact that the refusal of a street vendor to continue to tolerate indignity and the sheer sadism of so much bureaucratic power was heard and acted on in a way that eventually brought down a brutal dictator and ally of imperialism and, for a moment at least, seized the initiative from the dictators, the officials, the experts, the police and the NGOs and put it, firmly and gloriously, in the hands of the people.

This is not the first time that the agency of people that don’t count has, like the proverbial thief in the night, suddenly appeared at the centre of the world stage without warning.

The Christian story is just one of many in which a poor man from some village in the provinces assumes a tremendous historical consequence that far outweighs that of his tormentors. And from the Haitian Revolution of 1804 to the Paris Commune of 1871 to the anti-colonial movements of the 50s and 60s that ignited a global rebellion in 1968 the modern world has periodically been remade by the intelligence and courage of the women and men it has most denigrated.

There are many lessons to be drawn from the drama unfolding in North Africa and the Middle East. One of them is that we should not assume that South Africans will continue to trudge through life without work, without homes and without dignity forever.

If we carry on as we are, the day will come when a fire will be lit in Grahamstown or Harrismith or Ermelo, or on some farm or in some school or shack settlement whose name we don’t yet know, and neither the rubber bullets, party thugs, offers of jobs and money to leaders or senior politicians arriving in helicopters with smiles and big promises will put it out.

Pretoria News: Shacks outside luxury estate burned down

Click here to read this article in German.

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=13&art_id=vn20100722044540942C703998&singlepage=1

Shacks outside luxury estate burned down
July 22 2010 at 09:42AM

By Graeme Hosken
Crime Reporter

Good enough to build and clean the “madam’s” multimillion rand home, but too poor to live outside the walls of a luxury Pretoria security estate, a Malawian family watched as Tshwane Metro Police torched their shack along with dozens of others.

The mom begged not to be identified for fear of being fired and losing the measly R50-a-week salary she is paid to clean her employer’s multimillion Woodhill Estate home.

The woman – a mother of three children, including a seven-month-old infant – described how she and her young family were getting ready to sleep on the streets.

“It is freezing. I don’t know what to do. I am scared my children will die,” she said.

Their crime: They, along with 400 other people, are an eyesore and destroy the property value of the residents living in five luxury housing estates around their little community of migrant workers and illegal immigrants, known as “Cemetery Estate”.

The “estate” is on council land between the Pretoria East Cemetery and Woodlands Boulevard shopping centre.

Close by, are the multimillion rand Woodhill, Mooikloof, MeadowGlen, MeadowRidge and Hillside security estates.

Accused of being illegal immigrants and of being behind the area’s apparently skyrocketing crime rate, many “Cemetery Estate” residents worked as cleaners in the luxury homes on the posh estates.

That was until Wednesday when metro police, on the orders of lawyers representing those living in the estates, burnt down their shacks and ordered them to leave the Pretoria East area.

Using a court order from 2008 to control the occupation of council land along Garstfontein Road, the estates’ lawyers on Wednesday demanded that police destroy the 50 or so shacks in “Cemetery Estate”.

Within less than 24 hours of an “eviction notice” being served on “Cemetery Estate” residents, heavily armed metro police, guarded by the Garsfontein SAPS, oversaw the shacks’ destruction – torn down with spades and crowbars.

Plastic sheeting, cardboard partitions and wooden planks were dragged into piles and torched.

While city and law enforcement authorities have accused those living in “Cemetery Estate” of being illegal immigrants and criminals, no one was arrested or held for deportation.

A “slip-up” saw metro police failing to notify Home Affairs officers about illegal immigrants living in the area, or alerting the council’s housing and social services departments about the need for alternative accommodation.

Asked why no one was arrested, police said they didn’t have time to check fingerprints.

The Malawian mother, a qualified teacher whose husband was paid R600 a month to build her ‘madam’s’ multimillion rand house, said: “We can work inside the estates, but can’t live next door.

“Council does this because we are poor and our ‘madams’ are rich; because we have plastic roofs and paraffin stoves and they have tiles and electricity,” she said.

Mariza Oelofse, representing residents from the luxury estates, said: “We were approached by our clients to have these squatters removed. We went to the council and requested they adhere to the court order and remove these people, which is what they did.

“We are satisfied with the way the city responded.”

Oelofse said the land could not be occupied because it was agricultural land and a nature conservancy. “Highly endangered plant and animal species have been decimated because these people have eaten them and polluted the Moreleta Spruit with human waste.

“There are strict regulations regarding land occupation. Our clients have expensive rates and people can’t just stay here.”

Asked where the people should stay, Oelofse said: “It is not our concern.”

Metro police spokeswoman Alta Fourie said the informal residents posed a “serious” problem, especially regarding crime.

“Housebreakings, breaking into cars, rape, and smash-and-grab attacks have increased, mostly because of these illegal immigrants,” she said.

Asked for the crime statistics and why no one was arrested, Fourie referred the Pretoria News to the SAPS whose spokeswoman, Aveline Hardaker, referred the newspaper back to Fourie.

Fourie said residents were given 24 hours to move. “We told them we would destroy their shacks if they didn’t move, which is what happened. It is now their responsibility to relocate and find their own accommodation,” she said.

Attorney Louise du Plessis, representing “Cemetery Estate” residents, said the court order was not against her clients.

“There is no court order on that property. The existing court order says the municipality must bring an application to have the people evicted, which it has not done. This order is not an eviction notice and the council’s actions are criminal.

“Evictions can’t happen by torching people’s property. This is a declaration of war by the city on civil society and homeless people and we will now see them in court,” she said.

Mark Napier, of Urban Landmark, said regardless of whether there was a court order or not, the city had to find alternative accommodation for evicted people.

He said: “Virtually all cities’ policy statements, including Tshwane, talk of integration of poorer people into the city. But, as soon as a real opportunity arises, the city listens to the wealthier residents and evicts the poorer residents.”

Asked to comment, council spokeswoman Dikeledi Phiri, said: “I can’t respond… due to the unavailability of key officials in the housing department.”

* This article was originally published on page 1 of Pretoria News on July 22, 2010

Pretoria News: Mamelodi mayhem

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=15&art_id=vn20100324042902824C118956&singlepage=1

Click here to see some pictures.

Mamelodi mayhem
March 24 2010 at 07:15AM

By Graeme Hosken, Barry Bateman and Lesego Masemola

Violent service delivery protests erupted in Mamelodi yesterday, with police fighting running battles with angry residents.

Police reinforcements were brought in from across Gauteng to quell the violence.

The protests, which saw nearly 4 000 people from the township’s eastern informal settlements take to the streets, led to the closure of Mamelodi’s tertiary institutions and saw demonstrators prevent thousands of people from going to work.

While nearly 1 000 protesters hurled stones at police in running street battles and blockaded roads outside the University of Pretoria’s (UP) Mamelodi campus, 3 000 protested outside Metrorail offices at the Pretoria railway station.
Continues Below ?

City law enforcement authorities admitted they had been caught “off-guard” by the latest demonstrations which began on Monday night with “street committees” barricading roads with rubble and burning tyres.

The committees are alleged to have blocked families with children, seeking the safety of relatives’ homes in other parts of the township, from leaving the violence-racked areas of Phomolong informal settlement and Extension 11 near Pienaarspoort railway station where rioting broke out.

The violence continued through yesterday and last night a tense calm prevailed.

Protesters from Extension 11 were demonstrating over the lack of trains in their area. Metrorail suspended trains after a spate of violent attacks in October.

The demonstration in Phomolong was over a lack of housing, which residents claimed they were promised from April 1.

Protesters from both areas joined forces against the police, who were issued with rounds of buckshot.

Dozens of protesters were injured, most after being shot with rubber bullets. At one stage, the protesters told police to retreat if they wanted an end to the violence.

Nearly 1 300 Phomolong residents are set to be moved ahead of construction of the new Greenview railway station.

Community leader Nelson Ngala said they were upset because the people identified for relocation should have been moved three weeks ago. “The city was meant to address our concerns, but they never did. They ignored us and our plight,” he said adding that they would continue striking until their concerns were addressed.

Community Safety MMC (member of the mayoral committee), Dikeledi Lehobye, who admitted the city had been caught off guard by the protests, said they had called on the provincial government to dispatch reinforcements. “The situation is volatile and we are worried about the violence,” she said.

She said the protests were a surprise because they thought they had an agreement with residents.

“We reached an agreement with Phomolong residents two weeks ago over when the moves would take place, which will be done in phases.

She said the violence was unacceptable and that as government they would restore law and order.

Metrorail spokesman Sibusiso Ngomane said the decision to re-instate services to the area had been approved, but they were awaiting the findings of several reports .

“We need to asses the condition of the rail line and perform a risk assessment.

“We have been working closely with the Tshwane Metro Council, commuter representatives and the railway police,” he said.

Ngomane said this information was relayed to the commuter representatives at a meeting at the Pretoria railway station, but it was too late to stop the violence.

He said a plan to build a train station near the Greenview informal settlement had been approved.

Last year, on several occasions commuters forced train drivers to make unscheduled stops at the area to allow commuters to alight. “The tender to build the new station has been closed and the contractor appointed.

“We will build a new platform and double railway lines to allow more traffic and ensure the communities who live close to the rail reserve are catered for.

“The population explosion in the area required that we invest in infrastructure,” he said.

UP spokesman Sanku Tsunke said the campus was closed after students struggled to gain access to it.

“Access to the campus has been compromised and buses transporting students to and from the campus were not operating” he said, adding that 480 students been affected by the protests.

Tsunke said the university was due to assess the situation today and, should protests continue, it would remain closed.

He said no damage was reported at the campus and security personnel at university had been placed on high alert until further notice.

Meanwhile, Karabo Seanego reports that police foiled plans by a group of Soshanguve residents to extend their protest action for the second day.

Community leader Devilliers Makgakane said: “They told us to go home and we if we returned they would start to shoot. We decided to disperse and wait for tomorrow (today) when the premier comes here.”

Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane and members of her executive council were expected to visit Soshanguve to assess progress in the delivery of services.

# March 8 – Fed-up residents of Soshanguve take to the streets.

# March 8 – Mamelodi residents barricade the streets with burning tyres and rocks.

# March 9 – Mamelodi continues to burn as State of City address is given.

# March 11 – Residents of several informal settlements in Atteridgeville embark on a service delivery protest that results in the arrest 11 people.

# March 22 – Bullets fly in Soshanguve Block R as protesting residents in Ward 27 call for the removal of their councillor, William Maluleka, whom they claim is failing them.

* This article was originally published on page 1 of Pretoria News on March 24, 2010

Pretoria News: Flames of fury in Tshwane

http://www.pretorianews.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20100312041237100C374155

Flames of fury in Tshwane
12 March 2010, 07:44

By Mogomotsi Magome, Graeme Hosken and Patrick Hlahla

Tshwane experienced its third service delivery protest of the week; this time in informal settlements outside Atteridgeville.

Police and soldiers patrolled the streets on Thursday as the protest – once again over the lack of housing and services – turned violent.

But speaking in the city, Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane said the fact that South Africa was a democratic country did not mean disgruntled citizens could do what they want.

She said government was aware of genuine grievances which had to be attended to, but warned protesters against infringing other people’s rights and said destroying communal facilities hurt no one more than the protesters themselves.

“What they destroy belongs to their communities. This kind of behaviour results in government having to spend repeatedly the sparse resources on the same projects or facilities,” she told the National Press Club.

She accused those who organised some of the protests as having ulterior motives, adding it was particularly hurtful for her to see children who should be in school taking part in protests.

On Monday and Tuesday there were similar service delivery protests in Soshanguve and Mamelodi ahead of executive mayor Dr Gwen Ramokgopa’s state of the city address.

On Thursday police evacuated Somali business owners in the informal settlements of Phomolong, Vergenoeg and Brazzaville as criminals taking advantage of the situation looted their spaza shops.

In an unusual move, members of the SA National Defence Force, believed to be paratroopers, patrolled barricaded streets where tyres had been set on fire.

The last time they were deployed in township unrest was during the xenophobic violence of 2008. SANDF spokeswoman Brigadier-General Marthie Visser could not say why soldiers were in the area.

While some have seen the move as a sign of tougher steps being taken to ensure that service delivery protests do not turn violent, others speculated it could be about preparation for the World Cup.

A planned march in the Atteridgeville area was called off at the last minute, but poor communication by community leaders was blamed for the mayhem which followed.

Residents overturned and burnt rubbish bins, made fires in old tyres and threw stones at police. Police retaliated, firing rubber bullets to disperse the crowd and seeking out those taking advantage of the situation to steal from spaza shops.

Police spokeswoman Captain Tessa Jansen said police would remain in Atteridgeville for as long as necessary. She said 11 people had been arrested for looting and for malicious damage to property.

Abdul Hassan, of the Somali Association of South Africa, said they had been advised by police to evacuate the area.

“At first the police were outnumbered, but they managed to bring in reinforcements and the people stopped what they were doing.

“We were mostly concerned about the shop owners deep inside the informal settlements,” said Hassan.

Moriti Phasha, a resident of Mshenguville informal settlement for nearly 10 years, said they were tired of empty promises from politicians.

“I have voted three times since I moved here, but we still do not have any electricity in this place. People are really angry about what is happening around here,” said Phasha.

He denied that the majority of residents had any intention of looting and said those who did were criminals.

“We were involved in the reintegration of the foreigners back into the township after the xenophobic attacks, so we cannot loot their shops and chase them out,” he said.

Gauteng Civic Association (GCA), an Atteridgeville-based community organisation, said it had called off the planned march to the Housing Department after they met housing officials who assured them their grievances would be addressed.

* This article was originally published on page 1 of The Pretoria News on March 12, 2010

Pretoria News: ‘We are people not animals’

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=13&art_id=vn20100112042213139C950033

By Graeme Hosken
Crime Reporter

Waving a hammer above her head and screaming and hurling abuse as a group of specialist shack demolition operators smashed down the walls of her home, Itireleng resident Agnes Monyebodi burst into tears when her plates and kitchen table were broken.

“Why are they doing this? Why are they breaking my stuff? I have done nothing to these people yet they are breaking my home and destroying my property,” she said, as she frantically tried to pick up her children’s clothes from beneath the demolishers feet.

A hysterical Monyebodi was among thousands of Itireleng residents, who yesterday clashed with police in running battles in the settlement, barricading dirt roads with burning tyres, wood and metal as demolishers broke down their homes in a mass eviction.

Eventually restrained by a neighbour, Monyebodi, fighting back tears, vowed that she would not move. “I will come back here. No one has shown me any letter that says I cannot live here. If I cannot live here then where must I live?

“If government does not want us to live here and they do not give us houses then we will take houses, either from the foreigners, whose houses have not been broken down, or from the people living in Laudium,” she said.

As Monyebodi screamed at demolition squads armed with crowbars and iron poles, Stephan Malatji, a neighbour, sat dejected in a garden chair, his head in his hands, resigned to the fact that there was nothing he could do to stop the demolishers from tearing down his home.

With his mattress, TV, fridge and children’s clothes scattered around him, Malatji, said he was at a loss.

“What am I going to do? Where am I going to live? What are my children going to eat?” he asked as dozens of people frantically carried beds, mattresses and sheets of metal past him to friends living in the formal section of Itireleng.

For Malatji’s wife, Flora, the demolition was too much and she burst into tears as the walls of her house were broken down.

“I can’t understand it. This does not make sense. We are people not animals. Why do they have to treat us like this?” she asked.

For Jescina Mohale, of Polokwane, whose meagre belongings fitted into two suitcases, the demolition has left her angry.

“I do not know why they have done this. These people should be ashamed. Our children are now homeless and we are destitute.

“The government has taken away our houses so now they must give us new houses. We are angry and we are not going to just go away.

“We will stay here for as long as it takes to get a house, even if it means we will die,” she said.

Pretoria Portland Cement (PPC) spokesman, Kevin Odendaal, said while they had enjoyed a good relationship with the Itireleng informal settlement residents, problems arose in July with the deliberate illegal expansion of the settlement in an attempt “to force the municipality into action” over the availability of land.

“This expansion spilled onto PPC’s mining property. PPC held meetings with community and municipal representatives to resolve this issue, but none were successful and the shacks increased.

“Not only is PPC concerned about the invasion, but also about the safety of the community as Mooiplaas is a sizeable operation utilising large mining equipment and explosives,” he said.

Odendaal said: “In October an initial eviction order, which gave illegal occupants the opportunity to voluntarily vacate PPC property was given, but to date, they have not complied with the order. PPC tried all avenues to resolve this issue amicably but to no avail.”

* This article was originally published on page 3 of Pretoria News on January 12, 2010