Author Archives: Abahlali_3

Mercury: Cato Manor protest leader buried

There are some errors in this article. Firstly Gwala did not led the protest that resulted in the councillors’ offices being burnt down. He withdraw from that protest and returned to his shack when he saw the direction that was going in. No individual or organisation led that protest. Secondly S’bu Zikode has never had bodyguards. When he was called to speak (after the intimidation from the councillor) every umhlali stood up in support and some members of the elected leadership followed him to the podium to stand in solidarity – they are elected leaders, unarmed, and not bodyguards.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/cato-manor-protest-leader-buried-1.1541985#.UdWBQvkwfUV

Cato Manor protest leader buried

By Bongani Hans

Durban – The leader of the Cato Manor shack dwellers who was shot dead last week was buried at his home in Inchanga on Wednesday.

Nkululeko Gwala led several violent protests against the eThekwini Municipality’s allocation of low-cost houses, claiming legitimate shack dwellers were being passed over.

The 700-strong mob he led damaged infrastructure and challenged others in low-cost houses in Cato Manor, demanding they show proof that they were the rightful owners of their homes.

Last Wednesday, after the community held a meeting on the unrest with Durban mayor James Nxumalo and the head of the ANC in eThekwini, Sibongiseni Dhlomo, Gwala was shot dead near his shack at about 10.30pm.

His killers have not been caught.

On Wednesday, at his funeral, his followers, who are members of a group called “Abahlalo Basemjondolo”, which means “people who stay in a shack”, described him as “a hero” and a “freedom fighter for shack dwellers”.

Group leader, Sbusiso Zikode, who was flanked by bodyguards at the funeral, said: “He died for the homeless people of Durban, the province and the whole country.

“He died for the people who are angry because the leaders don’t want to listen to them. The leaders are killing us because they see us as a hindrance to their abuse of tenders,” he said.

The ANC councillor in Inchanga, Mzwamasoka Shozi, warned Abahlali Basemjondolo not to use Gwala’s funeral to incite hostility against ANC leaders.

“Inchanga is an ANC stronghold. Unfortunately there are those who do not accept that the ANC is in power.

“What happened outside Inchanga should not be brought to Inchanga.

“If you want to talk about your problems don’t talk about them here in Inchanga,” said Shozi.

Abahlali Basemjondolo secretary Bandile Mdlalose said ANC leaders had told a meeting held in Cato Crest last week that Gwala should leave the area because he had “become a menace”.

“Gwala was fighting against housing being allocated in a corrupt way,” she said.

“We informed the mayor that some people were getting more than one house each, but the mayor refused to listen to us,” said Mdlalose.

Mourners said Gwala had been active in organising community development protests in Inchanga.

Gwala’s father, Thembinkosi Ndokweni, said his son left behind five children.

“Even though he left school in standard two and was unemployed he had passion for education,” said Ndokweni.

Upgrading Informal Settlements in South Africa – Abahlali baseMjondolo supports a Participatory and Democratic Approach

2 July 2013
Presentation to the Department of Human Settlements National Meeting on the Upgrading of Informal Settlements, Cape Town

Upgrading Informal Settlements in South Africa – Abahlali baseMjondolo supports a Participatory and Democratic Approach

by S'bu Zikode

Apartheid denied most of our people an equal place in the cities. It denied most of our people decent housing. The restoration of the dignity of our people requires that we build democratic and inclusive cities in which there is decent housing for all.

The Promise

The Freedom of Charter of 1955 declared that “All people shall have the right to live where they choose, be decently housed, and to bring up their families in comfort and security.” When the ANC was unbanned in 1990 their posters said “Occupy the Cities!”. When the election came in 1994 we were promised houses. The new Constitution of 1996 insists that “Everyone has the right to have access to adequate housing” and makes evictions without an order of the court illegal.

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Business Day: Only some are free to speak their minds in South Africa

http://www.bdlive.co.za/opinion/columnists/2013/07/03/only-some-are-free-to-speak-their-minds-in-south-africa

Only some are free to speak their minds in South Africa

by Steven Friedman

THE past few days have reminded us vividly that there are two South Africas, one much more democratic than the other. The democratic version we inhabit remains elusive for many in townships and shack settlements.

In the mainstream — inhabited by people with access to the national debate — some foreign journalists have battled to understand why US President Barack Obama’s visit triggered heated argument: they wanted to know why we were more anti-American than other places he visited. Some local voices joined in, denouncing some of their fellow South Africans for putting off foreign investors and sullying our name in the "civilised" world by complaining about Obama.

But the debate didn’t show that we are more or less hostile to the US than anywhere else. It showed that we are a diverse society in which many competing views vie to be heard. It also showed that, for some, disagreeing is safe and easy here and so more people do it. Contrary to those who yearn for a past in which dissent was kept under tight control, the fact that different people have differing views on Obama is a source of strength. Investors put money into many countries in which debates are heated, and there is no reason they should refuse to do it here because some people say some things others would prefer not to hear.

The debate on Obama’s visit is not unusual — challenges to government decisions are the norm here. The debate is often simplistic as it frequently reduces every problem to an attack on the government. But if its quality is open to doubt, its vigour is not.

Sadly, we were also reminded last week that a very different reality prevails where the poor live. The democratic spirit in the mainstream was of little help to Nkululeko Gwala, a housing activist and member of the shack-dweller organisation, Abahlali BaseMjondolo, who was murdered last week. According to Abahlali, the killing followed a meeting in which Gwala represented residents of the Cato Crest township, who barricaded streets while protesting against corruption, in a meeting with the local councillor. He is said to have asked "why houses were only going to party members and why ward committee members were receiving two or three houses". Abahlali says Gwala and other delegation members then asked for a meeting with the ward committee but, when they arrived, found African National Congress (ANC) and South African Communist Party members, even though they had said that they did not want to talk to political parties. It says the ANC members insisted "that this was ANC land and that the housing project was an ANC project and that they would make all decisions in the area and about the project". Gwala, it says, reacted by walking out.

Later that day, according to Abahlali, there was a protest during which a councillor’s house was burned down — it says its members were not responsible. In response, a municipal car on which the words "Community Participation" were painted drove through Cato Crest calling residents to a meeting chaired by Durban mayor James Nxumalo, and ANC Durban chairman Sibongeseni Dhlomo. The meeting, says Abahlali, was devoted to attacks on Gwala, who was accused of "making it difficult for the ANC to operate" and was said to be introducing a new political party. Dhlomo reportedly said that Gwala must leave Durban and urged residents to "protect the area".

Since Abahlali was subject to violent assault in 2009, it assumed that this was another call to attack its members. That night, Gwala was, Abahlali says, accosted by four men and shot 12 times.

The implication is obvious — someone took the verbal attack on Gwala and Abahlali to its logical conclusion and removed the activist forever.

Gwala is not the first housing activist to be murdered, nor is this an unusual example of violence against those who challenge local power-holders. On the contrary, it is part of a pattern in which political bosses see challenges to their authority as mortal threats and seek to crush them, which is why challenging political authority is often as difficult in the townships as it is easy in the suburbs.

Democratic politics is not impossible in the townships and shack settlements. The ANC has lost key by-elections in these areas, a clear sign that it is possible to challenge it at the polls and win without risking life and limb. But the contrast between the open debate over Obama and the appalling fate of Gwala shows that the democracy freely available to some is less a reality to others.

This may change if more competitive party politics makes the votes of the poor more valuable, forcing politicians to plead rather than bully, and organisations such as Abahlali grow.

Until then, it might help democracy’s growth if some of the freedom available in the mainstream debate was used to defend the right to speak of millions at the grassroots.

Daily News: Shack-dweller activists go into hiding

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/kwazulu-natal/shack-dweller-activists-go-into-hiding-1.1540809#.UdPoUfkwfUU

Shack-dweller activists go into hiding

by Nkululeko Gwala

Durban – Three members of shack-dwellers’ organisation Abahlali Basemjondolo, who have been receiving death threats, have gone into hiding after the murder of a comrade in Cato Crest.

Activist Nkululeko Gwala, 34, was shot 12 times on Wednesday night following a meeting to discuss protests in the area, including torching the offices of two local councillors.

Gwala and his alleged part in the destruction became the centre of the discussion.

But on Monday, Sibongile Msiya, 30, also a member of Abahlali Basemjondolo, who admitted to being among the protesters, denied Gwala had been present at the torching of councillor Mzimuni Ngiba’s offices.

She said she now feared for her life and was in hiding.

Members of the Dhunbar community – part of councillor Zanele Ndzoyiya’s ward 30, which includes Cato Manor – had been on the rampage the night before Gwala got killed, said Msiya.

“He (Gwala) had been a very strict person. After seeing them run amok, he decided to withdraw himself and went home. He had never been there,” she said.

She said she had heard rumours that she was on a hitlist.

“My landlord had received a message that she must get rid of me, otherwise she would lose her RDP house,” she said.

Abahlali Basemjondolo general secretary Bandile Mdlalose said three members had had to flee the area after rumours spread that their names were on a hitlist.

Asked why these allegations had not been reported to the local police station, she said they had lost trust in the police.

“After it became clear that a meeting on Wednesday was about our (member) Gwala, police ought to have given him protection,” she said, adding that police had been at the meeting when speakers incited the community to violence.

Mdlalose said Gwala had reported intimidation, but nothing was done to investigate.

“As an organisation, we are obliged to protect our members. It will be difficult to say how long they would remain in hiding. Some of our members have been in hiding after assassination attempts failed three years ago,” she said.

SAPS spokesman Colonel Vincent Mdunge said nothing had been reported to the police regarding a hitlist, and he rejected allegations of incompetence levelled at the police.

“These people are just mongering rumours. They should make statements at the police station if they have any information which might help us arrest Gwala’s killers,” said Mdunge.

He said the situation was calm in Cato Manor and police were monitoring the area.

Gwala is expected to be buried in Inchanga on Wednesday.