Two ANC Councillors to appear in the Durban High Court after being charged with the murder of Thuli Ndlovu

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Abahlali baseMjondolo press statement

Two ANC Councillors to appear in the Durban High Court after being charged with the murder of Thuli Ndlovu

Mduduzi Christian Ngcobo, also known as Nqola, an ANC councillor in KwaNdengezi Ward 12 and his comrade PR councillor Luvelile Lutsheku are due to appear in Durban High Court tomorrow to answer to the charge that they are responsible for the murder of Thuli Ndlovu. The two councillors have been appearing in the Pinetwone Magistrate’s court for several times and had received a bail of R10 000 each. A few weeks after being given bail Nqola was rearrested and charged with attempted murder in KwaNdengezi after he was caught firing shots at some people. Just last week Nqola was given a bail again. Continue reading

Citizen: Shack dwellers get their day in court

Sne Masuku & Yadhana Jadoo, The Citizen

Champagne and celebrations galore were the order of the day when the KwaZulu-Natal High Court ruled yesterday that an interdict obtained by the province’s human settlements and public works MEC to evict shack dwellers was illegal.

The ruling, which the Socioeconomic Rights Institute (Seri) said has “national implications”, also sent a clear message to municipalities and property owners seeking similar interdicts.

Abahlali baseMjondolo, an organisation representing shack dwellers, approached the high court in May questioning the legality of the use of a blanket interdict granted by Judge Koen on March 28, 2013. It had interdicted anyone from occupying 1 068 properties owned by the state.

The eThekwini Municipality used the order obtained by the MEC, Ravi Pillay, to evict shack dwellers at Cato Crest (Marikana) and Lamont (Sisonke) informal settlements.

Hundreds of shack dwellers camped outside the high court ahead of the ruling, as they sang liberation songs. Abahlali baseMjondolo president Sbusiso Zikode said the ruling would benefit all shack dwellers in the country and those dispossessed of their land.

“This high court ruling is finally going to bring dignity to the people living in shacks. From now on, people living in shacks would be able to sleep better at night knowing that no one would kick them out of their homes,” he said.

“They looked down on people living in shacks for too long. We have been in and out of courts, even to the Constitutional Court. Today we have finally defeated the government legally.”

However, he said other issues such as the compensation of the victims and the families of those who died during the forced evictions at gun point were not yet finalised.

The Mercury: Evicting ‘land invaders’ unconstitutional.

Tania Broughton, The Mercury

Durban – A “blanket” court order which empowered police and city officials to evict “land invaders” and destroy their shacks with no notice to those affected and no judicial oversight has been declared unconstitutional.

Members of the shack dwellers organisation Abahlali baseMjondolo sang and danced victoriously outside the Durban High Court after Judge Fikile Mokgohloa’s finding was handed down on Thursday.

The Socio Economic Rights Institute (Seri), which represented Abahlali, said the judgment had national implications and sent a clear message to other municipalities and landowners seeking similar interdicts that they too were subject to the law. Continue reading

News24: Court victory for Durban shack dwellers

Durban – The president of a shack dwellers organisation has welcomed a High Court order that prevents authorities from evicting people without a court eviction order.

“This means that the evictions that took place between 2013 and 2014 in Cato Crest and Sisonke Village in Lamontville were carried out unlawfully,” Abahlali baseMjondolo president Sbu Zikode said.

“It also means that Human Settlement MEC Ravi Pillay’s eviction order, which was basically an interdict used to evict people, was also unlawful.”

Zikode said this was a victory for all shack dwellers and homeless people around South Africa.

 “It also means that the state will no longer continue to be a law unto itself. The government must respect people without adequate homes, because the law applies to all who live on the land.

‘Illegal, immoral and criminal’

“All shack dwellers now have the right to resist and defend their homes if officials want to evict them without a High Court eviction order.

“If they evict you, it will be illegal, immoral and criminal. You must say no,” said Zikode.

On Thursday, Judge Fikile Mokgohloa handed down a judgment in a case against the KZN Human Settlement MEC, eThekwini Municipality and others.

The Socio Economic Rights Institute (SERI), which represented the organisation, said in a statement the judge struck down a temporary court order that had been used by the MEC and the municipality to evict thousands of poor people from informal settlements in Durban.

The MEC claimed that the order was used to prevent land invasions, but SERI argued “that the order was intended to progressively remove the occupants of more than 1 500 parcels of open land in Durban without having to follow normal court procedures or give notice to the occupants”.

National implications

Nomzamo Zondo, director of litigation at SERI said the judgment had national implications.

“It represents a significant step towards achieving a more just dispensation for people who feel the burden of inequality most in South Africa.”

Responding to the judgment, Pillay said he took land invasion seriously and the government would not abandon its constitutional responsibility to prevent it.

“While respecting all judgments, we disagree with certain factual conclusions in the judgment.  It also seems that there is a difficulty in defining the dividing line between stopping land invasion and effecting an eviction…”

The United Front said it celebrates the judgment. “Until now the MEC has been using the interim interdict to evict hundreds of families using brutal police methods.

“Thanks to the dedicated struggle of Abahlali baseMjondolo, SERI and the Legal Resources Centre, this victory has been won,” said interim national secretary Mazibuko Jara.

Continue reading

United Front Statement Saluting the AbM Court Victory

21 August 2015

PRESS STATEMENT: THE UNITED FRONT SALUTES ABAHLALI BASEMIJONDOLO FOR ITS COURT VICTORY OVERTURNING ILLEGAL EVICTIONS IN SISONKE VILLAGE AND CATO CREST

The United Front welcomes and celebrates with Abahlali baseMijondolo (AbM) the judgment delivered against the MEC for Human Settlements and the eThekwini Municipality in the Durban High Court today. The judgment sets aside and interim interdict sought by the MEC and Municipality which would have allowed it to continue evicting landless people from shacks on open lands. Until now the MEC has been using the interim interdict to evict hundreds of families using brutal police methods. Thanks to the dedicated struggle of AbM, together with the Socio-Economic Rights Institute (SERI) and the Legal Resources Centre (LRC), this victory has been won. Continue reading

SERI: Durban High Court Stops Thousands of Evictions

DURBAN HIGH COURT STOPS THOUSANDS OF EVICTIONS

Today Judge Mokgohloa, sitting in the Durban High Court handed down judgment in MEC for Human Settlements, KwaZulu Natal v. eThekwini Municipality and Others. The Judge struck down a temporary court order that had been used by the MEC and the Durban Municipality to evict thousands of poor people from informal settlements in Durban.

The MEC claimed that the order was used only to prevent land invasions. But SERI, acting on behalf of Abahlali baseMjondolo, and thirty of its members, whose homes the Durban Municipality destroyed 5 times by relying on the order, argued that it was an “eviction order in disguise”. SERI argued that the order was intended to progressively remove the occupants of more than 1 500 parcels of open land in Durban without having to follow normal court procedures or give notice to the occupants. Continue reading

Breaking news: Abahlali baseMjondolo has won an important victory in in the Durban High Court against the MEC for Human Settlements and the eThekwini Municipality

Thursday, 20 August 2015

Abahlali baseMjondolo Press statement

Breaking news: Abahlali baseMjondolo has won an important victory in in the Durban High Court against the MEC for Human Settlements and the eThekwini Municipality

The MEC sought the confirmation of an interim order which, he said, permitted him to restrain the “invasion” of over 1000 properties within the Durban area, by directing the eThekwini Municipality and the Police to “take all the necessary steps to prevent any persons from invading or occupying the properties” to “remove any materials placed” on the properties and “demolish any structure” placed on the properties.

The order was granted in March 2013. Since then, it has been used to evict many hundreds, if not thousands, of poor people living in shacks on open land in Durban. Two of the affected communities: Sisonke Village (formerly known as Madlala Village and represented by the LRC in Durban) and Cato Crest (represented by SERI) together with Abahlali, acting in the public interest and on behalf of its members intervened in the case in order to have the interim interdict set aside.   Continue reading

Attachments


Judgment in the Marikana & Sisonke Village Case