Author Archives: Abahlali_3

Sleeping in the rain: even snakes treat us with more respect than the City of Cape Town

Abahlali baseMarikana Press Statement
4 May 2013

Sleeping in the rain: even snakes treat us with more respect than the City of Cape Town

As the homeless residents of Marikana, we are here because we do not have anywhere else to go. We are also now jobless which means we cannot afford to pay rent to live in someone's backyard. We always vote for this government but they always treat us like dogs in our own country. The government sends the Anti-Land Invasions Unit, Law Enforcement and SAPS to demolish our houses. They did this on Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and again on Friday the 3rd of May.

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Cape Times: Residents vow to return to Philippi

http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/residents-vow-to-return-to-philippi-1.1509911#.UYSCNKLTx35

Residents vow to return to Philippi

Xolani Koyana

IN BITTERLY cold conditions, Zoe Zulu spent a night in a leaking church with her five-year-old daughter and one-month old son after her shack was demolished by the city’s Anti-Land Invasion Unit on Wednesday.

Zulu is part of a group of more than 100 people who have erected shacks on municipal-owned land on Symphony Way in Philippi East. The informal settlement has been dubbed Marikana.

They have vowed not to vacate the land despite being forcefully removed by the Anti-Land Invasion Unit three times in the past week.

After her structure was taken down, residents provided a mattress and blankets.

She was housed at a makeshift church with a leaking roof.

The Cape Times first reported on Zulu yesterday when she was pictured on her knees with her baby on her back and her five year old at her side. She was surrounded by members of the Land Invasion Unit.

“My son is sick now because it is really cold in here,” she said.

“He has been coughing through the night. I tried to protect them (the children) from the cold, but the church is leaking and the cement floor is cold. I got a few old mats outside to make it better.”

Before she put up her structure, the 36-year-old Zulu had been renting a shack in a backyard in Lower Crossroads, just across from where land had been occupied.

Her cousin had told her that people were building structures and that she would find a spot there.

The first time the Land Invasion Unit came “they saw I had children and didn’t demolish my shack. They said I could stay,” Zulu said.

“But on that day they didn’t even listen, they just took it down.

“I would rather die there. Where else must we go?”

Although it was cold, Zulu was grateful to the residents who had helped her family with shelter.

Others were not as fortunate as Zulu, spending Wednesday night on the dunes where the shacks had been erected.

Yesterday morning residents had already rebuilt some shacks, but the Anti-Land Invasion Unit returned to the scene.

Busisiwe Ngwenze was one of those who had to sleep in the open field. Her materials had been confiscated, forcing her to erect a make-shift tent using plastic sheets. “We are not going anywhere. They say that the land is council land, but we are also part of the city. They should be able to provide land for us, instead of building all these malls,” Ngwenze said.

She said most of the people who built shacks there came from backyards in Lower Crossroads, Nyanga and Philippi.

The City of Cape Town has previously said it would continue to take down illegal structures.

Note: According to the City of Capt Town’s official spokesperson they destroyed 125 shacks on 1 May, 11 on 2 May and four on 3 May. They claim that they were entitled to destroy these shacks without a court order as none of them were inhabited. This is a straight forward lie.

Cape Times: We will rebuild shacks – residents

This article fails to note that these demolition were unconstiutional, illegal and criminal acts on the part of the Anti-Land Invasions Unit.

http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/we-will-rebuild-shacks-residents-1.1509268#.UYJEIaIyZvJ

We will rebuild shacks – residents

Nombulelo Damba

West Cape News

FOR the third time in two weeks, the City of Cape Town’s Anti-Land Invasion Unit clashed with residents in the Marikana informal settlement next to Symphony Way in Philippi East, where 126 shacks were demolished yesterday.

Rubber bullets were fired and one person was arrested as Marikana residents opposed the demolition of their shacks, which they have since re-erected.

Anti-Land Invasion Unit spokesman Stephen Hayward said the city would continue to take down illegal structures in Marikana even though the residents had vowed not to leave the area until the city provided them with alternative accommodation.

The situation was tense yesterday when police arrested Mzwamadoda Fingo, 22, who wanted to take down his shack himself.

Then when resident Xolani Mswabi was seen being held down by police, residents started throwing stones at the police, resulting in the police firing rubber bullets.

Residents said they had nowhere else to go because they were unemployed and could not afford rent.

Fingo said police refused to let him take down his own shack, which he wanted to do to ensure his building materials were not damaged. When he insisted on doing so, two officers handcuffed him and took him to the Philippi police station. Mswabi said he was also trying to retrieve his building materials when a city official pushed him.

Mswabi fought back but police officers restrained him before letting him go.

Resident Zoe Zulu, 36, who is a mother of two children, said officials started demolishing her shack while she was still inside feeding her five-year-old daughter. She said the Anti-Land Invasion Unit officers first asked her for water, which she gave to them, before destroying her house.

When West Cape News arrived, Zulu was carrying her one-month-old son while the five-year-old was crying. She did not know where to go.

“This is very painful. I’ve been renting a shack in Lower Crossroads, paying more than R500 a month.

“Recently I lost my job, so I could not afford to pay rent, that’s why I decided to build my shack here. It’s not nice living here with a one-month-old child but I do not have a choice,” she said.

Zulu said she had not been able to save anything from her home.

Residents said they will simply rebuild their shacks again, while more than 100 residents marched to Philippi East police station looking for a place to sleep.

Yesterday afternoon Hayward said the situation was calm but the Anti-Land Invasion Unit would continue to monitor the situation.

M&G: Mpisane wins tenders worth R455m – despite conviction

http://mg.co.za/article/2013-04-29-controversial-mpisane-awarded-r445-tenders

Mpisane wins tenders worth R455m – despite conviction

Controversial businessperson Shaun Mpisane has been awarded tenders worth R455-million after a settlement that allowed her to bypass normal processes.

According to the Mercury on Monday, a report tabled recently before the finance and procurement committee revealed Mpisane’s company Zikhulise Cleaning, Maintenance and Transport was awarded three section 36 contracts between July last year and March this year relating to an Umlazi housing project.

Ethekwini municipality treasurer Krish Kumar said the contracts were as a result of an out-of-court settlement the city had with Zikhulise.

Mpisane took the city to court claiming that the project was stalled by city officials who questioned whether it should do business with a convicted person.

Mpisane has a 2005 conviction for VAT fraud.

The settlement allowed Mpisane to continue with the project, including new phases of construction.

Facing 53 charges of fraud
Kumar said the city was entitled to award the contracts, as Zikhulise was the original contractor and a decision was taken that it was appropriate for the company to continue with the project.

In May, Mpisane will stand trial for allegedly inflating invoices by more than R5-million to cut her tax bill.

She also faces 53 charges of fraud, forgery and uttering.

Shawn, one half of the controversial Mpisane couple, is accused of submitting false documents to obtain Construction Industry Development Board gradings, which were then used to obtain public works department tenders worth R140-million.

In February, Mpisane was arrested on allegations of fraud as the National Prosecuting Authority searched for assets worth R140-million.

The NPA at the time said luxury cars valued at around R22-million were seized from former Durban metro police officer Sibusiso Mpisane and his wife.

The cars included a Rolls-Royce Phantom, a Rolls-Royce Ghost, a Maserati, a Ferrari Scaglietti, a Porsche Cayenne Turbo and a Panamera Turbo, two armoured BMW 5 Series and two Hummers, the authority said in February.

In another case she is also charged with corruption for allegedly trying to persuade a state witness in one of her tax fraud cases to tamper with evidence. – Sapa

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ENCA: Shack dwellers say they won’t vote

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Durban – Abahlali Basemjondolo, the shack dwellers’ organisation in KwaZulu-Natal, are threatening to boycott the 2014 general election, if they do not have appropriate housing by then.

The organisation held a rally in Durban at the weekend to commemorate what they called “no freedom day”, while the rest of the country celebrated 19 years of democracy.

The shack dwellers said they were tired of living in shacks without electricity or water.

Abahlali Basemjondolo also said they were fed up with receiving food parcels during election campaigns in exchange for their vote, but no other help at any other time.

They want the 400,000 housing backlog in the eThekwini Municipality to be resolved before next year’s election.