Category Archives: Zakheleni shack settlement

The Marikana Massacre and the South African State’s Low Intensity War Against the People

http://defendingpopulardemocracy.blogspot.com/2012/08/the-marikana-massacre-and-south-african.html

The Marikana Massacre and the South African State’s Low Intensity War Against the People

by Vishwas Satgar

The massacre of the Marikana/Lonmin workers has inserted itself within South Africa’s national consciousness, not so much through the analysis, commentary and reporting in its wake. Instead, it has been the power of the visual images of police armed with awesome fire power gunning down these workers, together with images of bodies lying defeated and lifeless, that has aroused a national outcry and wave of condemnation. These images have also engendered international protest actions outside South African embassies. In themselves these images communicate a politics about ‘official state power’. It is bereft of moral concern, de-humanised, brutal and at odds with international human rights standards; in these ways it is no different from apartheid era state sponsored violence and technologies of oppressive rule. Moreover, the images of police officers walking through the Marikana/Lonmin killing field, with a sense of professional accomplishment in its aftermath, starkly portrays a scary reality: the triumph of South Africa’s state in its brutal conquest of its enemies, its citizens.  Continue reading

Four Arrests in Umlazi

Update: All four of the arrested comrades were released at 1:10 today. No bail was demanded. There was a vigorous protest outside the police station.

15 August 2012
Unemployed People’s Movement Press Statement

Four Arrests in Umlazi

On Sunday night the Zakheleni Crisis Committee led a march of hundreds of people on the police in Umlazi to demand that they make arrests with regard to the attempted murder of Bhekimuzi Ndlovu following the public screening of a video in which Ndlovu identified his attackers. The police responded by arresting the named individuals and by addressing a mass meeting in the settlement where the promised further investigations. After this the meeting dispersed peacefully.

Following this meeting the family of one of the men that was arrested went to the police and claimed that four leaders of the Zakheleni Crisis Committee had assaulted them. This is an outright fabrication. In fact the police were present in the settlement at the time of the alleged assault.  Continue reading

Two Arrests Made in Connection with the Shootings in Umlazi, Further Threats to Bheki Buthelezi

Monday, 13 August 2012
Unemployed People’s Movement Press Statement

Two Arrests Made in Connection with the Shootings in Umlazi, Further Threats to Bheki Buthelezi

On the 30th June Bhekimuzi Ndlovu was shot in the Zakheleni shack settlement following a series of protests against the Ward Councillor and for land, housing and other development. The case number is 225/07/2012.

Ndlovu had become close to Bheki Buthelezi and to the struggle that was being organised in the Zakheleni shack settlement. However he had been close to the local ANC and the councillor and so they saw him as a traitor. He was shot by supporters of the ruling party. They sacrificed him, like an animal. They thought that he was dead. After Ndlovu was shot the ANC supporters convened a meeting and said that Bheki Buthelezi was the one who had shot Ndlovu. It has become a typical tactic of repression for the ruling party to engage in violence against activists and to then blame the activists for this violence. However unbeknownst to the local ANC Ndlovu had survived the shooting and was in hospital.

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Ward 88 BEC Refuses to Go to the People

26 July 2012
Combined AbM & UPM Press Statement

Ward 88 BEC Refuses to Go to the People

For the past months the organised poor in Ward 88 in Durban have been fighting for their rights, and the resignation of Nomzamo Mkhize who is the current ANC Ward Councillor.

Their struggle has led to activists being arrested, shot at with real bullets by the police and threats and an assault at the hands of the councillor. Despite all these violations of their right to participate in decision making that directly affects them the activists in Ward 88 did not give up and have shown that they are prepared to continue their fight for justice and their human dignity to be installed.

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Mercury: It’s about the Poor, not Politicians

It’s about the Poor, not Politicians

by Imraan Buccus

As courageous journalism brings more and more information into the public domain about how some under our last municipal regime behaved like “Chicago gangsters”, it’s becoming increasingly clear just how bad things were. The Manase report seems to show the extent to which our municipal coffers were plundered, but it’s the investigations into the power that people like the late John Mchunu wielded over the municipality that explains how it actually happened.

One symptom of what went so wrong in Durban has been the political assassinations that have so shamed the city. Who would have thought that what the premier bravely referred to as the confluence of politics, business, and crime would have led us to this point in the democratic era? If we stay on the current path we’ll end up more like Colombia than the society envisaged in our constitution.