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26 July 2009

SAPA: Journos barred from looting case

http://www.sundaytribune.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=&fArticleId=nw20090723144506749C435965

Journos barred from looting case
23 July 2009, 14:53

Reporters were on Thursday barred from attending the case of 90 people arrested for looting shops in Durban.

The first appearance of SA Unemployed People’s Movement members was held in the basement of the Durban Magistrate’s Court. The case was initially going to be held in Court 10, but the venue was changed and journalists were not informed.

After spending more than four hours waiting, reporters went to control prosecutor Nhlanhla Mkhize to demand permission to attend the proceedings in the basement.

“We cannot allow you to go down there because it is not allowed. We decided to do it there because we could not bring all of them to the normal court room. We did it for security reasons.”

Journalists would be allowed to see the charge sheet later on Thursday, he said.

The movement’s spokeswoman Nozipho Mteshane said members of her organisation would ask for free bail and deny the charge of theft, stemming from Wednesday’s spree that took in Shoprite Checkers and Pick n Pay outlets.

“We were not stealing. We were just demonstrating. Taking food from the shops was a way of showing government that unemployed people are hungry. We stormed shops after other attempts of appealing for assistance failed.”

She said they had written many letters to the government and also submitted memorandums asking for basic income grants for unemployed people. Mteshane claimed her organisation represented “millions” of unemployed South Africans. She vowed to continue organising similar protests, saying the state would not afford to keep all members of her organisation in jails.

“We will make sure that the soccer world cup is spoiled if our demands are not met.”

Ethekwini municipality mayor Obed Mlaba and ANC secretary in KwaZulu-Natal Sihle Zikalala condemned the looting.

“Notwithstanding the constitutional right of people to strike and the plight faced by the unemployed, the looting of shops cannot be justified. We are disturbed by the movement’s criminal activity. These are purely criminal deeds and they can never be tolerated,” Mlaba said.

The municipality confirmed it received the memorandum from the SA Unemployed People’s Movement a few weeks ago and forwarded it to the departments which dealt with grants.

“While concerns relating to unemployment may be genuine, we believe that yesterday’s rampage accompanied by the looting was smacked with opportunism (sic), where criminals used the protest to satisfy their own selfish needs,” Zikalala said.

He appealed to organisations to use the appropriate channels to voice their dissatisfaction. – Sapa