Category Archives: Quarry Road

Daily News: Downpour kills eight

http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/news/downpour-kills-eight-1.1187604

Downpour kills eight

At least eight people were reported dead, about 700 houses had been destroyed and thousands had been left displaced in KwaZulu-Natal, following Sunday’s heavy downpour, the eThekwini Disaster Management Unit said today.

According to the SA Weather Bureau, 62.6mm of rain fell last night in Durban, which had already recorded 209.6mm for November, almost double its average.

The acting head of the eThekwini Emergency Control and Disaster Management Unit, Vincent Ngubane, said deaths had been recorded at Umlazi, Newlands East and Chatsworth.

The official death toll is eight, but the numbers could rise as emergency operations begin.

In E-Section, Umlazi, Qodeni Ximba, 17, was crushed to death after a landslide caused a lounge wall to collapse on her at 11pm. She had been sleeping on the floor next to the wall. In H-Section, Lindiwe Zulu, 37, also died after a wall collapsed on her.

Isaac Tau Zobane, 45, died in Quarry Heights Road, Newlands East when a sandbank collapsed on to his shack.

In Lamontville at least six RDP houses collapsed.

Ngubane said they had also received reports of flooding at Umkomaas, Isipingo, eDumbe (Paulpietersburg), Eshowe, Nkandla, Gingindlovu, the metro police satellite station in Albert Park and several informal settlements in the city.

He said the true extent of the damage would only be known later today when the disaster management teams submitted their reports to the municipality.

KZN Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs spokesman, Lennox Mabaso, said MECs Nomusa Dube (Co-operative Governance), Weziwe Thusi (Social Development) and Ravi Pillay (Human Settlements) were expected to visit the affected families today.

He said at least 700 homes had been damaged or destroyed. A final assessment would be conducted by the department to determine what aid would be offered to families and which areas would be declared disaster zones. He said it was believed Umlazi, Clermont and Lamontville had suffered the most damage.

“Affluent areas such as Umhlanga were also affected by flooding. Even the house of the provincial head of disaster management, Mthokozisi Duze, was flooded.”

KZN-based shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali Basemjondolo, said at least 300 residents at various informal settlements across the province had lost their belongings as a result of the flooding.

Several people were rescued in separate incidents from the flood waters in Randles Road, Durban last night. Netcare 911 spokesman, Chris Botha, said paramedics, police and search and rescue teams were called to four houses that were flooded to waist depth by the heavy rains.

“Rescue personnel assisted an elderly lady and a one-year-old toddler to safety. Both were treated for the cold and the elderly patient had to be treated for an asthma attack. They were later handed over into the care of their families because they refused hospital treatment,” he said.

Also, a man was rescued in the severe floods that occurred in the Amanzimtoti area.

“Reports indicate that the man was driving along Long Acres Drive in Doonheights. He tried to drive through a puddle when his vehicle disappeared under the water,” Botha said.

A local resident grabbed a surfboard and swam to the vehicle.

“The driver was pulled from the window of the driver’s side. Rescue personnel arrived at the scene and performed a search to ensure that no other people were trapped in the water. After the rain stopped, it took about 40 minutes for the water to subside before the road was re-opened,” Botha said.

KwaZulu-Natal Department of Transport spokesman, Kwanele Ncalane, said no major road accidents were reported last night.

Areas on the south coast were also said to be severely affected. Nomusa Mqwebu the mayor of Hibiscus coast said councillors had been sent out to do an audit of all the damage that had been caused by the torrential rains.

An eThekwini city official who did not want to be named as he is prohibited from talking to the media, said disaster management teams had been out all night assessing the damage.

He said that some of the damage caused was due to sand subsiding or landslides. These were because “of the steady soaks in the past week which meant that the ground was wet and when it got pounded by the heavy rains, it subsided”.

He said that some of the storm water drains had failed to cope with the deluge leading to localised flooding in some areas.

There was a 60 percent chance of thunderstorms for Durban this afternoon, said Durban weather forecaster, Mduduzi Mthembu.

Tomorrow, Mthembu said, the sky would clear in the morning.

On Wednesday, areas along the south coast would experience a cold front and rains.

Due to the cold front, most of KZN will have wet weather on Thursday, with thunderstorms in the afternoon. There is an 80 percent chance of rain at the weekend.

Floods, destruction and despair in the shacks

Update: The Arnett Drive settlement in Reservoir Hills and the Richmond Farm transit camp were also flooded and in KwaMashu sewer systems and a big pipe burst causing serious damage. People are protesting in a number of places in KwaMashu.

Monday, 28 November 2011
Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Release

Floods, destruction and despair in the shacks

Abahlali welcomes the world in our country, our province and in our city. We also welcome progressive delegates to our homes, our settlements and our flooded shacks.

 




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Daily News: Allegations of arson fuel anger among squatters


Kennedy Road Burns – 16 June 2009, Picture by S’bu Zikode.

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5733025

Allegations of arson fuel anger among squatters

November 17, 2010 Edition 1

NONDUMISO MBUYAZI

A WAR of words has erupted between the city and shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo over remarks by a top housing official that the burning of shacks in eThekwini was being “orchestrated”.

The claim by Nigel Gumede, head of the city’s housing committee, at a recent committee meeting, has left the movement perplexed.

Several Durban informal settlements have gone up in flames this year, claiming the lives of four people and leaving hundreds of people destitute.

Gumede said he wanted informal settlement arsonists to be criminally charged for the offence, saying the same laws needed to apply to people, whether they were rich or poor.

“If a person burns down their house or flat they get charged with arson. The same law needs to apply to people responsible for burning shacks,” he said. “We have a strong suspicion that the burning of shacks is orchestrated.”

What further exacerbated the situation was that the culprits were not apologetic for starting the fires, but instead demanded new houses from the city, said Gumede.

“The shack dwellers don’t do anything about these culprits who are responsible for destroying their shacks and belongings.”

However, Abahlali spokesman Clement Mtshali yesterday dismissed the allegations, saying it was an insult for the city to accuse them of such an “atrocious” act.

“Why would someone purposely burn down their shack? Why would someone give away the small home that they have in hope that the city will provide them with a house? That doesn’t make any sense and these allegations are an insult to the shack dwellers,” he said.

Mtshali said he was “really disappointed” that the city could accuse shack dwellers of such a “heartless” act. “So they mean that we would burn down a shack, killing people in the process, just because we hoping to get a new house. How heartless do they think we are?”

In the most recent incident, two people died, more than 1 000 people were left homeless and 200 dwellings were destroyed when a massive fire ripped through a large informal settlement in Quarry Road last month.

In other incident, firefighters battled for hours last month trying to put out various fires at an informal settlement on Jadoo Place in Springfield.

In August, a fire at the Kennedy Road informal settlement destroyed 500 shacks and left about 2 000 residents without homes. And in July a fire at the same settlement killed two people, gutted about 500 shacks and left more than 200 residents homeless.

Earlier this year, in another Kennedy Road informal settlement fire, 150 shacks were destroyed and 400 people left homeless, while the Cato Crest informal settlement was hit by four fires this year.

nondumiso.mbuyazi@inl.co.za

Isolezwe: Bakhale ngotshwala kusha imijondolo

http://www.isolezwe.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5672285

Bakhale ngotshwala kusha imijondolo

October 04, 2010 Edition 1

Boniswa Mohale

BAKHALA ngophuzo oludakayo abahlali basemijondolo ekuQuarry Road eThekwini kulandela ukuthi owesilisa okusolwa ukuthi ubedakiwe eshiye ikhandlela livutha lacekela phansi imijondolo engaphezu kuka-200 kwafa abantu ababili.

Ngokusho kukaMnuz Robert Mzobe (62), osekomidini elibhekele ezokuphepha kule mijondolo ngabe lo mlilo awuzange ube khona ukube owesilisa ohlala lapha akashiyanga ikhandlela livutha ngesikhathi eya esipotini.

“Umlilo uqale emjondolo womuntu okade ngibikelwa ngaye ukuthi uphuza ngokweqile. Izolo uye washiya ikhandlela livutha ngesikhathi eya esipotini. Ukube ubengaphuzanga ngabe ukucabangile ukuthi kumele acime ikhandlela uma ephuma endlini. Kufe abantu ababili abangakwazanga ukuvuka ngoba bebephuze kakhulu,” kusho uMzobe.

UDivision Commander Alfred Newman okunguyena ofike nezicishamlilo kule mijondolo uthe lo mlilo uqale entathakusa yayizolo kanti ngesikhathi befika imijondolo ibivele isivutha.

“Sifike ngezimoto ezimbili zokucima umlilo nezintathu ezithwala amanzi, sikwaze ukudambisa amalangabi emuva kwehora elilodwa kanti ukucima yonke into kusithathe amahora amane. Babili abantu abashe bangqonga kulo mlilo abanye bathathwa ngamaphoyisa,” kusho uNewman.

Bangu-1 000 abantu abasele dengwane kanti uphiko lwezezindlu nekhansela bebekhona izolo sebeqale nokunikezela ngokudla.

Ikhansela le ndawo uMnuz Jayraj Bachu lithe abantu abashelwe yizindlu bazolala etendeni elizolethwa wuphiko lwezezindlu kuMasipala weTheku kanti kuzokwazeka namhlanje ukuthi abantu bazosizakala kanjani.

Ngokusho kwekhansela kufanele ukuthi abantu bakule mijondolo kade bazithola izindlu njengoba babe yingxenye yohlelo lukahulumeni lokuqeda imijondolo.

Lithe abanye bahamba bayohlala ePargade naseWilberdatch kanti abanye basala ngoba bethi lezi zindawo zikude nomsebenzi.

Umndeni olahlekelwe yindodana kulo mlilo uthe awunayo imali yokuyingcwaba njengoba kungasebenzi muntu khona kanti ugogo wakhona uthe akazi ukuthi izingane ezifundayo zona zizoze ziye nini esikoleni njengoba kushe yonke into.

Another Coffin for Another Durban Councillor: Quarry Road Marches on Jayraj Bachu

Another Coffin for Another Durban Councillor: Quarry Road Marches on Jayraj Bachu

On Tuesday 4 October well over a 1 000 people, mostly from the Quarry Road settlement, marched to demand land, housing, the return of their toilets and the resignation of Ward 23 Councillor Jayraj Bachu. Quarry Road is a relatively small settlement perched on the muddy banks of the Umgeni River in the elite suburb of Reservoir Hills. The march was put to together in a few days and the organisers, the Quarry Road Development Committee, had only expected a few hundred people. But the message that the poor have a right to live in the city and should fight forced removals proved so resonant that participation exceeded all expectations.

In December last year the eThekweni Metro tried to force Quarry Road residents to accept ‘slum clearance’ followed by ‘relocation’ to the ‘rural periphery of the Metro’. Some people did agree to move but many others refused to move. There was a bitter clash with police and a number of injuries and arrests. A 17 year old boy is still in prison awaiting trial. Once people had shown that they were prepared to resist forced removals, and to resist them vigorously, there was something of a stalemate. The Metro couldn’t afford the spectacle of violent clashes between shack dwellers and police on a main road in an elite suburb. They still justify their development policy in the name of the poor and so prefer to avoid highly visible conflict . They decided on a war of attrition and removed the toilets that they had installed some years before. This is no small thing. People get sick when there are no toilets – sometimes so sick that they die. It is estimated that 3 million suffer serious diarrhoea and that 300 000 children die from diarrhoea every year in South Africa. The Metro’s attempt to force the poor out by removing their toilets is a potentially (and probably inevitably) fatal act of aggression.

The return of the removed toilets was the central demand of the march. Other key demands were for the right to live in the City and for land and housing to be made available in the city. Marchers also warned that they would “fight all attempts at forced removals” and would not allow the City to “dump them in rural areas”. The final demand was for the resignation of the Councillor and for the keys to his office to be handed over the people. The tone of the march was uncompromisingly militant. Speakers demanded that Bachu hand over the keys to his office immediately, forced him to take questions from the marchers and made it clear that they would not vote, for Bachu or anyone else, until their toilets had been returned and they had been given land and housing in the city.

This was the third large legal march by shack dwellers in Durban this year. Just over two weeks ago more than 5 000 people, mostly from the Kennedy Road settlement, marched to demand land, housing, toilets and the resignation of Ward 25 Councillor Yacoob Baig.

The Quarry Road and Kennedy Road marches carried mock coffins with their councillors’ names on the side and ended with mock funerals. The City has not taken this well. The very first public intervention of the new eThekwini Municipality speaker James Nxumalo has been to slam the mock funerals as unacceptable. Nxumalo said that in a context where two councillors have already been assassinated this month and that a number of others have received death threats the mock funerals are “a serious matter”.

In response to the Kennedy Road march City Manager Mike Sutcliffe revived the racist agitator thesis and argued that the protesters are being ‘used’. Sutcliffe blamed the protests on a prominent white academic. Ironically that academic has never set foot in any of the settlements or even met any of the people who organised the marches. Bachu tried to dismiss the Quarry Road march as the work of ‘outsiders’. But ANC hacks are going to struggle to explain away the Quarry Road march. It had the full and enthusiastic support of all political (and generally apolitical) groups in Quarry Road. The ANC civic umbrella body SANCO has a presence in Quarry Road and even SANCO supported the march fully and worked hard to make it a success. The SANCO rep, Angelina Mosiea, standing in front of a row of journalists and wearing a SANCO t-shirt and cap, called on people not to vote and demanded that Bachu hand over the keys to his office. Even paid up card carrying ANC cadres are in open revolt. The party is in as much disarray at the bottom as it is at the top.

Reservoir Hills has consistently been the safest ward in the whole country for the ANC. But if the Metro continues to try and force the poor out of the city the ANC will no longer get the votes of the shack dwellers and the rich will no longer be able to pretend to themselves that a vote for the ANC is a vote for the poor. The battle lines of the future are becoming clear.

Sifuna izindlu esamhlala la Clare Estate!
Asivoti ngoba asiboni ntuthuko!
Phansi ngobachu ngoba akasisebenseli!
Siyahlukunyezwa ngabomthetho amaphoyisa!