Category Archives: Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa

Evictions and Alternative Accommodation in South Africa: An Analysis of the Jurisprudence and Implications for Local Government

The jurisprudence (case law) of the South African courts (especially the Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal) has significantly contributed to the right of access to adequate housing, enshrined in section 26 of the Constitution. The courts have supplemented the legal framework by developing a number of progressive legal principles that should be upheld in eviction cases. The jurisprudence has therefore led to the development of a new cluster of relationships between the parties involved in eviction proceedings, a cluster of relationships that is characterised by a series of rights and obligations pertaining to various parties. Yet despite years of litigation and a host of progressive judgments municipalities have been hesitant, unwilling or unable to act on the obligations laid down in case law. It is amid this complexity that this report seeks to provide a comprehensive analysis of the jurisprudence on evictions and alternative accommodation, and the contingent obligations on municipalities in respect of the provision of alternative accommodation. It is hoped that the report might act as a to guide activists, communities and public interest law practitioners caught up in eviction related struggles, as well as local government officials who are tasked with devising and implementing housing policy.

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Evictions and Alternative Accommodation in South Africa: An Analysis of the Jurisprudence and Implications for Local Government

Our Movement is Under Attack

Monday, 2 September 2013
Abahlali baseCato Crest Press Statement

Our Movement is Under Attack

The eThekwini Municipality's Land Invasion Unit has again demolished shacks and evicted residents in Cato Crest without a Court Order. This is despite the undertaking made before the Durban High Court that they will not demolish any shacks in Cato Crest pending the final court decision. They demolished on Sunday and again this today. This morning they demolished 15 shacks, 8 of them were the homes of people who where among those who secured an interim court order preventing the destruction of their homes. The few bullies running this municipality are rendering it a criminal municipality with no respect for the poor, for democracy or the rule the law.

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SERI Cato Crest Press Release

eThekwini Municipality Goes Rogue, Illegally Evicts Residents

PRESS RELEASE
Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI)
2 September 2013

ETHEKWINI MUNICIPALITY GOES ROGUE, ILLEGALLY EVICTS RESIDENTS

eThekwini demolishing shacks at Cato Crest despite undertaking to High Court

Yesterday and today the eThekwini Municipality has been evicting residents of Cato Crest informal settlement in violation of an undertaking it made to the Durban High Court last month.

Three weeks ago the municipality began demolishing the homes of shackdwellers at Cato Crest settlement without a court order, rendering a number of residents homeless. These residents have been left out of a housing development in the area ostensibly because they are tenants and “come from the Eastern Cape.” They are also, seemingly, being left out of legal protections against evictions. The Cato Crest residents were being assisted by Abahlali baseMjondolo member and Cato Crest housing activist Nkululeko Gwala until his death in an apparent assassination in June 2013. Gwala was exposing corruption in housing allocation at the Cato Manor housing development.

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Attachments


SERI Cato Crest Press Release

‘Jumping the Queue’ – Waiting Lists and other Myths

‘Jumping the Queue’, Waiting Lists and other Myths: Perceptions and Practice around Housing Demand and Allocation in South Africa

Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa & Community Law Centre

“Politicians and officials responsible for housing policy, at all levels of the state, have sought to create the impression that housing allocation is a rational process, which prioritises those in the greatest need, and those who have been waiting for a subsidised house the longest. The ideologically (and emotionally) charged concepts of ‘the waiting list’ and ‘the housing queue’ are emblematic of this. However, the situation is far more complicated. This report attempts to unpack some of the complexity and provide recommendations to government departments at all levels. It argues that the housing waiting list is a myth and should be eradicated from public discourse on housing in favour of a more nuanced way of characterising the rational, appropriate and humane responses to the broad range of housing needs in South Africa, which are not currently catered for by the market.”

The full report is available online at: http://www.seri-sa.org/images/Jumping_the_Queue_MainReport_Jul13.pdf

Minister of Police to pay damages to Abahlali members for police brutality

MEDIA STATEMENT
22 April 2013
Issued by:

Abahlali baseMjondolo
Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI)

Minister of Police to pay damages to Abahlali members for police brutality

Police ministry agrees to pay damages after police brutality against Abahlali baseMjondolo members in 2006

Today, the Durban High Court ordered the Minister of Police to pay a total of R165 000 in damages to two members of shackdwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo – Sbu Zikode and Philani Zungu – and one resident of the Kennedy Road informal settlement. The order, made by agreement, comes after officers from Sydenham Police Station illegally arrested and assaulted Zungu while he and Zikode were travelling to a radio debate with the then KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Housing, Mike Mabuyakhulu, in September 2006. Other officers from Sydenham Police Station then illegally shot a woman at the Kennedy Road informal settlement. The woman was part of a crowd which had gathered to demonstrate against the arrest of Zikode and Zungu.

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