Category Archives: The Guardian

Despite the state’s violence, our fight to escape the mud and fire of South Africa’s slums will continue

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/11/south-africa-fight-decent-housing-assassination

by S'bu, Zikode, The Guardian

Our movement of shack-dwellers – Abahlali baseMjondolo, representing some of South Africa's poorest people – was formed in 2005 in Durban and now has more than 12,000 members in more than 60 shack settlements. We campaign against evictions, and for public housing: struggling for a world in which human dignity comes before private profit, and land, cities, wealth and power are shared fairly.

When Abahlali baseMjondolo members take our place in cities we take it humbly, but firmly. We have won many important battles in court, including the overturning of the anti-poor Slums Act – but the law has not bought justice. Despite that victory, thousands of shack dwellers were forcibly removed to make way for developments ahead of the 2010 World Cup. Most were dumped in transit camps, left to rot without basic services. Some camps – such as Isipingo, south of Durban – were built on flood plains.

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No end in sight for police brutality in South Africa

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/feb/21/south-africa-police-brutality-shooting

No end in sight for police brutality in South Africa

by Justice Malala

People thought they would see no more peaceful protesters shot by police, but the force is turning violent again.

In July 2009 South Africa's then new police commissioner, Bheki Cele, told a newspaper he wanted the law to be changed to allow police to "shoot to kill" suspects without worrying about "what happens after that".

Two months later a young woman, Olga Kekana, was going out with three friends in a Pretoria township when she was shot through the head. The car she was travelling in was "mistaken" by police for one driven by car hijackers.

Survivors said the police had given no warning. Eight policemen opened fire. The car Kekana was in had 13 bullet holes. The police fled the scene and did not help the injured.

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The Guardian: South Africa’s ‘insidious’ housing problems happening in Britain

http://www.guardian.co.uk/housing-network/2012/nov/15/south-africa-britain-housing-problems

South Africa's 'insidious' housing problems happening in Britain

Housing campaigner Lindela Figlan finds similarities in the treatment of poorer British citizens and slum dwellers in South Africa

In the world's second most unequal country, South Africa, millions like me live in informal settlements without toilets, water or electricity – never mind decent shelter.

To fight against this we founded Abahlali baseMjondolo, which roughly translates as "the people of the shacks" to resist illegal evictions and campaign for the right to housing for all.

Visiting the UK, I have understood the same insidious denial of this right is also happening in Britain. My trip has highlighted our common struggles; how much the UK can learn from what is happening in South Africa and the persistence and determination of our movement in the face of attempts to close us down.

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Guardian: Marikana: a cover-up for all to see

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/nov/06/marikana-cover-up-south-africa

Marikana: a cover-up for all to see

Greg Marinovich

The Farlam Commission into the Marikana mine killings continues to be the vehicle for revealing the most shocking information about what happened at the place called Small Koppie on 16 August.

On Monday, Captain Jeremiah Apollo Mohlaki, crime scene investigator, was presented with two sets of images taken at the scene. The first set was taken while there was still daylight and showed the dead miners, few of whom had weapons near them. The commission then presented corresponding images of the same miners with traditional and hand-made weapons close by, even on top of the dead strikers.

One really does not need Mohlaki's own admission – and that of the police counsel Ishmael Semenya – to understand that the police had doctored the crime. The police at the scene were trying to make their claim of self-defence plausible. One understands this behaviour, inasmuch as any perpetrator will lie about their crimes.

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The Guardian: South Africa’s shack-dwellers fight back

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/24/south-africa-shack-bahlali-basejondolo

South Africa's shack-dwellers fight back

Abahlali baseMjondolo, a movement campaigning for South Africa's notorious shack developments, has been labelled 'neurotically democratic' – but its leader prefers to call it 'living communism'

Patrick Kingsley, The Guardian

Does protest work? And if so, does it need autocratic leadership? Judging from a shanty town in Durban, South Africa: yes, and definitely not. In September 2009, a mob armed with clubs and spears entered the Kennedy Road settlement and trashed it. They ransacked various homes and wounded dozens of residents, killing two.

The targeted houses were carefully chosen. One was the home of 37-year-old S'Bu Zikode, the president of Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM), a radical political movement that was born in the camp. The mob was linked to the local ANC branch – South Africa's ruling party – and the attack was an attempt to punish AbM for its actions over the past four years. Since 2005, AbM has introduced participatory democracy not just to Kennedy Road, but to 64 settlements in the region.

AbM's struggle is rooted in land. Around 10% of South Africans live in shack developments, and Kennedy Road is one of the most notorious. A decade ago, there were just six toilets for 6,000 residents.

In early 2005, it looked as if something might change. The ANC promised that a nearby plot would be given to the locals. But a month later came different news: the plot would be sold to developers, the locals forcibly removed. So the protest began. In March, the residents blocked off a local freeway. "We are tired of living and walking in shit," one shouted.

Next came painstakingly egalitarian weekly meetings. Leaders were elected, but no decision was taken without the agreement of the "shack-dwellers" – Abahlali baseMjondolo, in Zulu. "It is a politics that every ordinary person can understand," Zikode has said.

By 2007, the local authorities had no choice but to negotiate. Yet AbM still refused to allow a few leaders to make decisions on their behalf. "Neurotically democratic", according to one academic, they sent 28 inexperienced delegates to negotiate, and these had to report back to their assemblies to allow for collective decision-making.

But the neurosis works: AbM eventually secured tenure and services for several settlements, and still campaigns for others. Through its participatory structures, it is not just a petition for change; it embodies the change it calls for. It is, Zikode once said, "a living communism".

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