Category Archives: The Kennedy 12

Daily News: ANC cannot be seen as a democratic force

Click here to read the article in pdf.

http://www.dailynews.co.za/anc-cannot-be-seen-as-a-democratic-force-1.1109838

ANC cannot be seen as a democratic force

Richard Pithouse

At about 10.30 on the evening of September 26, 2009, a group of armed men, about 100, many of them clearly drunk, began moving through the thousands of homes in the Kennedy Road shack settlement in Clare Estate.

They knocked on some doors and kicked others in. They identified themselves as ANC supporters and as Zulus, and made it plain that their enemies were leading members of the shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo, who they described as Pondos.

They demanded that some men join them and assaulted others.

Those who refused to join them were also assaulted. The entirely false conflation of Abahlali baseMjondolo, an organisation that is admirably diverse at all levels, with an ethnic minority in the city emerged out of an attempt to cast the organisation as a front for Cope.

Cope had often been presented in ethnic terms in Durban at a time when mobilisation in support of Jacob Zuma was taking on an overtly ethnic form.

Abahlali baseMjondolo had long been accused of being an ANC front in IFP areas but is, in fact, firmly independent from all political parties.

As the attackers continued their rampage through the settlement, the conflation of Abahlali baseMjondolo with an ethnic minority resulted in violence that was both politically and ethnically organised.

The police, usually ready to swoop on shack dwellers in spectacular fashion at a moment’s notice, failed to respond to numerous and desperate calls for help.

Fled

Most of the people under immediate threat hid or fled, but as the night wore on, some people tried to defend themselves. At times this was organised in terms of a defensive ethnic solidarity.

By the next morning two people were dead. One, who died with his gun in his hands, had been one of the leaders of the attack. The homes of the elected local committee affiliated to Abahlali baseMjondolo and those of a number of other prominent people had been destroyed and looted.

The ANC, which usually responds to the crisis of urban poverty with an unconscionable lethargy, moved into action with remarkable swiftness.

The local ANC seized control of the settlement from the elected structures that had governed it.

The provincial ANC organised an Orwellian media circus in the settlement where ANC members from elsewhere pretended to be “the community”. Wild and patently untrue allegations were made about Abahlali baseMjondolo.

The MEC for Safety and Security, Willies Mchunu, and the provincial police commissioner, Lieutenant-General Hamilton Ngidi, issued a statement declaring that the settlement had been “liberated”.

People without ANC cards were excluded from public life in the settlement and death threats were openly made against a large number of activists, with the result that Abahlali baseMjondolo was effectively banned in the settlement.

Thirteen people, all Xhosa speaking and all linked, in various ways, to Abahlali baseMjondolo, were pointed out by the local ANC as being responsible for the violence. They were arrested and charged with an astonishing array of crimes, including murder.

At least 1 000 people had to flee the settlement. More than 50 people and, in Durban, the previously public activities of a whole movement with more than 10 000 paid-up members in 64 settlements, had to go underground.

Abahlali baseMjondolo issued a widely supported call for the recently retired Chief Justice Pius Langa to head a judicial commission of inquiry that would carefully examine all aspects of the violence in the settlement.

This call was ignored. Instead the provincial government set up a high-level task team to investigate what it called “criminality”. In a series of thundering press statements, Mchunu sought to present Abahlali baseMjondolo as a criminal organisation.

“Let us not,” he insisted, “give crime fancy names, criminals are exactly that – criminals – and they must be treated as such.”

He declared that “I hate criminals” and called for communities to compile lists of “criminals”.

Task

The task team began its work by summarily announcing that “the structure that is called Abahlali Base Mjondolo be dissolved” and then proceeded to invest its energies in trying to frame the men who had been arrested after the attack while allowing the open demolition and looting of the homes of Abahlali baseMjondolo activists to continue for months without consequence.

At the bail hearings of the men arrested after the attack, ANC supporters, some armed, came to court hearings where public death threats were openly issued.

The bail hearings were carried out in a way that was patently politicised and patently illegal.

The accused, who became known as the “Kennedy 12” after charges were withdrawn against one of them, were severely assaulted in prison.

The attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo didn’t come out of nowhere.

There had been an ANC meeting at the settlement at which it was said that S’bu Zikode, the national president of Abahlali baseMjondolo, had to be “chased from the area” because “the ANC couldn’t perform as it wanted”.

At the ANC regional general conference a week before the attack, the chairman of the eThekwini region, the late John Mchunu, warned against “counter revolutionaries… colluding with one mission to weaken the ANC and its alliance”.

Under the heading of “CRIMINAL”, his speech referred to Abahlali baseMjondolo as: “The element of these NGO who are funded by the West to destabilise us, these elements use all forms of media and poor people (sic).”

Before that there had been extremely violent assaults on Zikode and Lindela Figlan, the chairman of the Kennedy Road Development Committee.

Mzonke Poni, the chairman of the movement in Cape Town, had also been attacked.

The moment had been subject to sustained and often violent harassment by the police, between 2005 and 2007.

The attack on Kennedy Road was not the end of the repression confronted by the movement.

On November 14 that year the police attacked the Pemary Ridge settlement in Reservoir Hills, also affiliated to Abahlali baseMjondolo, kicking in doors, beating people and firing live rounds into the home of activist Philani Zungu.

Statements

Thirteen people were arrested and 15 were injured. All charges were eventually dropped against the 13.

The police have never had to account for the injuries to the 15.

On July 18, Mandela Day, the case against the Kennedy 12 was thrown out of court. No credible evidence had been brought against any of the accused on any charge and crystal clear evidence had emerged of the State’s attempt to frame the men.

Witnesses contradicted their original statements and each other and some freely admitted that the police had told them who to point out in the line-up. Credible testimony was given that statements to the police had been concocted by the police.

One witness admitted she was lying and others were obviously lying.

Another witness said she had been told to give false evidence but that she would not do so. She was subject to death threats and was attacked in her home and only saved by the quick reaction of her neighbours.

Another witness, a police officer, gave credible testimony that confirmed, in important respects, the Abahlali baseMjondolo account of events, including the fact that the violence in the settlement was an attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo by the ANC.

The State could not find, with both bribery and intimidation in its arsenal, a single witness to credibly attest to the veracity of the avalanche of propaganda issued by the ANC in the wake of the attacks.

The judge made some strong comments from the bench about the extremely dubious manner in which the case had been investigated and the obvious dishonesty on the part of the witnesses that stuck to the ANC line.

The ANC continues to deny, despite abundant evidence to the contrary, that its members organised the attack. Hopefully the civil case that Abahlali baseMjondolo is bringing against the police will allow some of that evidence to be tested in court.

But the ANC cannot deny that violence was used to drive activists from their homes, that their homes were openly destroyed and looted, and that death threats were openly issued against activists without any sanction from the police.

There is now a court record that shows clearly that the police investigation into the attack was a failed attempt to frame people linked to a social movement rather than an attempt to mount a fair investigation into the violence that began to occur in the Kennedy Road shack settlement in September 2009.

The ANC is also in no position to deny that its leading officials presented the largest social movement in the country as a criminal organisation without a shred of evidence to this effect, issued no statement of opposition to the violence and extreme intimidation directed against the leading activists in the movement and sought to summarily disband it by decree.

The time when it made sense to consider the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal as a democratic force has passed.

* Pithouse lectures politics at Rhodes University.

CounterPunch: No Easy Path Through the Embers

http://www.counterpunch.org/pithouse08012011.html

No Easy Path Through the Embers

By RICHARD PITHOUSE

In Texaco, his novel about the history of a shack settlement in Martinique, Patrick Chamoiseau writes of a “proletariat without factories, workshops, and work, and without bosses, in the muddle of odd jobs, drowning in survival and leading an existence like a path through embers.” But Texaco is also a novel of struggle, of struggle with the “persistence of Sisyphus”- struggle to hold a soul together in the face of relentless destruction amidst a “disaster of asbestos, tin sheets crates, mud tears, blood, police”. Texaco is a novel of barricades, police and fire, a struggle to “call forth the poet in the urban planner”, a struggle to “enter City”. It's about the need to “hold on, hold on, and moor the bottom of the your heart in the sand of deep freedom.”

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Dancing and tears and moving forward at Kennedy Road

Dancing and tears and moving forward at Kennedy Road
A statement of solidarity to Abahlali baseMjondolo from CLP
July 2011

All of us at CLP [Church Land Programme] were so happy when the 'Kennedy 12' were finally acquitted this week. We congratulate the movement on this victory and for the strength you have all shown throughout the process. We were proud and privileged to find some practical ways of helping during the ordeal. From the times we were able to see some of you in prison and in court, and during the time we were able to provide you with shelter in safe accommodation, the 'Kennedy 12' became much more than a group of 'the accused' to us. We got to know you well as real people.

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M&G: Kennedy Road 12 taste freedom

http://mg.co.za/article/2011-07-29-kennedy-road-12-taste-freedom/

Kennedy Road 12 taste freedom
NIREN TOLSI – Jul 29 2011

Outside the Durban magistrate’s court last week members of the “Kennedy Road 12” 12 members of Abahlali baseMjondolo, a shackdwellers movement based in Durban — stood blinking in the sunlight, almost un­able to believe their fate.

“I’m just too happy. I can’t believe I am outside again,” said 24-year-old Sibulelo Mambi, one of them.

An hour earlier, a nightmare that had begun almost two years ago for the 12 finally ended when magistrate Sharon Marks acquitted them of charges ranging from murder to public violence.

The charges related to a deadly attack on Durban’s Kennedy Road informal settlement in September 2009 which left two dead and thousands fleeing for their lives.

Evidence led by the state failed to shed light on the still murky events of that night, with Marks describing the state’s witnesses as “belligerent”, “unreliable” and “dishonest”.

In the attack, armed men who were calling for the ethnic cleansing of amaPondo from the settlement laid siege to a local community hall where the Abahlali baseMjondolo social movement’s youth wing was holding an all-night workshop. The terror that followed included the destruction of Abahlali leaders’ homes in Kennedy Road and the death of Nthokozisi Ndlovu and Ndumiso Mnguni.

Abahlali has long claimed that the attacks were instigated by the local ANC, with the possible collusion of local tavern owners. Their aim, Abahlali says, was to eviscerate a movement outside of mainstream politics that was mobilising poor people to uplift communities in informal settlements.

It is also alleged it was payback for the movement having the temerity to challenge the provincial government legally over the KwaZulu-Natal Slums Act, a case won in the Constitutional Court weeks before the attack.

The claims have been dismissed by the ANC.

Anglican Bishop Rubin Phillip, who provided support for the Kennedy Road 12, also described the arrests as politically motivated.

“Abahlali’s victory is a victory for all who speak the truth,” Phillip said.

“It is a victory that should give courage to the poor of eThekweni, of South Africa and the world who organise and mobilise and who speak and act for themselves.

“That is never an easy path and it seems always to provoke slander and violence from the powerful and the rich and from those who would rather speak for the poor than listen.”

The Socio-Economic Rights Insti­tute of South Africa (Seri), which with Trudie Nicholls Attorneys in Durban represented the 12, said that Marks “expressed disquiet that police identity-parade witnesses had been coached to point out members of an Imfene dance group closely associated with Abahlali rather than anyone who had been seen perpetrating the violence”.

After the state had closed its case the Kennedy 12 were granted an acquittal under Section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act on the grounds of a lack of clear evidence against the accused.

Seri executive director Jackie Dugard said last week’s verdict “raises worrying questions about police complicity in attempts to repress Abahlali’s legitimate and lawful activities on behalf of poor and vulnerable people living in informal settlements across South Africa”.

“We now call upon the police to launch a full and proper investigation into the attacks on Abahlali and to bring the real perpetrators of the violence to justice,” Dugard said.

Although there is no clarity about what happened at Kennedy Road that night the 12 have no doubts about what has happened since.

Outside court, Sicelo Mambi (31) revealed stab wounds on his stomach and head, which he said he suffered while in custody.

“It was because of intimidation. If you don’t belong to a gang, they will come after you,” he said.

Since the arrests the families of all of the Kennedy Road 12 have moved out of the settlement, many back to the Eastern Cape, and the 12 view it as imperative to be reunited with their families, rebuild their lives and find jobs again. A civil action suit has also been instituted against the state.

Two years ago the 12 had very little, and their long walk to freedom began again on Mandela Day.

Acquittal of the Kennedy 12

Acquittal of the Kennedy 12

We are grateful to hear the news of the acquittal of the Kennedy 12. Indeed this is a great day in the history of our democracy. We join those who salute Abahlali in their fight for justice in a country marred with corruption and repression against the poor.

Thembela Njenga

ESSET Director
6th Floor Khotso House
Marshalltown
6201