Category Archives: QQ

27th April UnFreedom Day Mass Rally at QQ Shack Settlement, Khayelitsha

27th April UnFreedom Day Mass Rally at QQ Shack Settlement, Khayelitsha

Tomorrow the 27th April, most people through out the country will be celebrating 17 years of our so called freedom or democracy.

Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape joined by Mandela Park Back yard dwellers, Gugulethu Anti-eviction Campaign, Delft Anti-eviction Campaign, Langa Concerned group from Langa TRA's and by many other community based organizations including pastor Xola Skosana who led a march from Gugulethu to Khayelitsha on the 23rd April under the campaign 'Welcome to Hell South African Townships' will be hosting a shack fire summit at QQ informal settlement from 10: am till 13:00 pm.

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Saturday Argus: ‘Rivalry and negligence’ to blame

http://www.capetimes.co.za/?fSectionId=271&fArticleId=vn20090725062729698C847631

‘Rivalry and negligence’ to blame
25 July 2009, 08:47

By Vuyo Mabandla

Residents in Cape Town’s informal settlements say political rivalry and negligence by leaders over a number of years, – and not direct political influence – are behind the spate of violent protests in the city in the past few weeks.

Residents of QQ section in Site B, Khayelitsha, said provincial, municipal and local leaders dating to former mayor Nomaindia Mfeketho’s time in office, had done nothing but “fight over positions and not attend (to) the people’s troubles”.

Mzonke Poni, the chairman of lobby group Abahlali Basemjondolo, said the group had complained about lack of service delivery for years.

“But because of political rivalry between the DA and ANC nothing has ever been done to address problems facing people in informal settlements. I have lost count of how many times we went to (municipal offices in) Cape Town, to put forward the people’s complaints, who are, by the way, living like animals in this township,” he said.

There has been speculation that the protests were fuelled by party loyalists who were against the province’s new leadership.

Referring to the violent protests by residents at the section two weeks ago, Poni said he believed there had been no political influence, saying that “whoever said that is misinformed”.

The protests by QQ residents two weeks ago were one of many that have rocked the country recently.

This week, the ANC identified the 12 “hotspots” where protests broke out. The party claimed that only seven of them were “genuine protests about service delivery”.

But Poni disputed this, saying the fault lay with the ANC leadership.

“Whenever the ANC government fails to deliver, it comes up with excuses and blames it on individuals. It’s true that its councillors lack commitment and skills, but it is the national leadership that is also to blame – and meanwhile people have to suffer. The only way the government notices us is when we express our anger and rage, then they understand how we feel.”

But ANC councillor Elsie Kwayinto blamed the lack of service delivery on what she said were “constant changes in data lists and leadership at government structures”.

“We need a single, permanent list of people who the municipality can keep track of when services are delivered. Changes in leadership also add to the delays,” she said.

When the Weekend Argus visited the settlement on Thursday, uncollected rubbish dotted Lansdowne Road. The aftermath of the recent storms was still visible and some shacks were still flooded with water.

Resident Funake Mkhwambi, 57, who has lived in QQ section for the past 20 years, said she had to deal with flooding every year.

“My shack gets flooded every year. I have to move every winter to stay with my cousins elsewhere. We are a family of eight, including five children who often get sick because of the cold and the dirty water.”

Another resident, Nolufefe Nomakhohliso, said she lived in fear of being attacked by gangsters at night because they often drank at a tavern close to her shack.

“I don’t feel safe here – at all. And because of the noise and the brawling that goes on here at night, I have to sleep with one eye open.”

Community leader Bongisiso Magubudela said leaving for work in the mornings was a struggle.

“I leave at dawn and when I open the door, water comes rushing in – it never drains out.”

The settlement is on top of a small hill, there are no toilets, only three taps are available and shacks are built too close to one another.

Poni said: “Forty percent of the shacks are built in flood-prone areas.”

He also said during Kwayinto and Helen Zille’s visit in 2006, the councillor had promised to move them to developed land in Mfuleni in the same year but nothing happened.

However, Kwayinto denied ever saying this. She said she only knew of the plans once she had a meeting with Abahlali after the visit.

She refused to comment on whether the protests may have been politically motivated, only saying she would address the people at a meeting still due to be scheduled.

Kwayinto also said although she was not sure when services would be delivered to the residents, she, the housing committee and Dan Plato’s office, were in the process of doing something about the problem.

* This article was originally published on page 4 of Saturday Argus on July 25, 2009

Cape Argus: Mayor pleads for patience on relocation

The City has been promising to move QQ residents to Bardale for almost a decade. They are tired of sitting back and being patient while their homes are flooded.

http://www.capeargus.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5087181

July 17, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

SOME of the residents of the flooded QQ informal settlement in Khayelitsha who staged fierce service delivery protests earlier this week will only be relocated to dry land next year, says Mayor Dan Plato.

Plato said yesterday that about 300 families from the QQ and RR sections in Site B would be moved to the Bardale temporary relocation area next October.
Residents of Burundi in Mfuleni, who had been worst affected by the recent floods, were in the process of being relocated there, he explained.

In that community, residents had been living under “dramatically worse and inhumane conditions”.

“We are relocating people from the pond onto dry land. We cannot relocate everyone at the same time.

“Communities need to trust us. They need to work with us. We won’t allow people to invade land,” he said.

On the Bardale site, residents would have access to electricity and other services while waiting for proper housing units from the government, Plato added.

The QQ settlement, which was rocked by violent protests on Tuesday and Wednesday, was relatively quiet yesterday afternoon.

But Landsdowne Road, which runs through the area, was still littered with smouldering barricades that had been erected during the protest.

A group of residents, mainly children, occasionally tried unsuccessfully to block the flow of traffic by pushing tyres on to the road.

Mzonke Poni, chairman of housing lobby group Abahlali baseMjondolo (”Shack Dwell-ers”), which had mastermind-ed the protest, said it was over “for now”.

Resident Funeka Mkwambi, 57, whose makeshift house is built on a seasonal wetland commonly referred to as the “Waterfront”, said the protest had been justified.

Mkwambi, who lives with seven other relatives, said that each time the area became flooded, “we have to live in water”.

And after this week’s floods, she was forced to wear gumboots to get access to their home.

“It’s not right. You only take them (gumboots) off when you are climbing on to a bed to sleep,” she said, wading through her flooded forecourt to check on her laundry drying on a line outside.

“It’s hard to live here. My three children and I suffer from asthma.

“Last night I couldn’t sleep, but we don’t have anywhere else to go,” she said, struggling for breath.

Poni said that because of the “harsh living conditions”, tuberculosis was rife in the community.

Cape Argus: Mayor pleads for patience on relocation

The City has been promising to move QQ residents to Bardale for almost a decade. They are tired of sitting back and being patient while their homes are flooded.

http://www.capeargus.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5087181

July 17, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

SOME of the residents of the flooded QQ informal settlement in Khayelitsha who staged fierce service delivery protests earlier this week will only be relocated to dry land next year, says Mayor Dan Plato.

Plato said yesterday that about 300 families from the QQ and RR sections in Site B would be moved to the Bardale temporary relocation area next October.
Residents of Burundi in Mfuleni, who had been worst affected by the recent floods, were in the process of being relocated there, he explained.

In that community, residents had been living under “dramatically worse and inhumane conditions”.

“We are relocating people from the pond onto dry land. We cannot relocate everyone at the same time.

“Communities need to trust us. They need to work with us. We won’t allow people to invade land,” he said.

On the Bardale site, residents would have access to electricity and other services while waiting for proper housing units from the government, Plato added.

The QQ settlement, which was rocked by violent protests on Tuesday and Wednesday, was relatively quiet yesterday afternoon.

But Landsdowne Road, which runs through the area, was still littered with smouldering barricades that had been erected during the protest.

A group of residents, mainly children, occasionally tried unsuccessfully to block the flow of traffic by pushing tyres on to the road.

Mzonke Poni, chairman of housing lobby group Abahlali baseMjondolo (”Shack Dwell-ers”), which had mastermind-ed the protest, said it was over “for now”.

Resident Funeka Mkwambi, 57, whose makeshift house is built on a seasonal wetland commonly referred to as the “Waterfront”, said the protest had been justified.

Mkwambi, who lives with seven other relatives, said that each time the area became flooded, “we have to live in water”.

And after this week’s floods, she was forced to wear gumboots to get access to their home.

“It’s not right. You only take them (gumboots) off when you are climbing on to a bed to sleep,” she said, wading through her flooded forecourt to check on her laundry drying on a line outside.

“It’s hard to live here. My three children and I suffer from asthma.

“Last night I couldn’t sleep, but we don’t have anywhere else to go,” she said, struggling for breath.

Poni said that because of the “harsh living conditions”, tuberculosis was rife in the community.