CounterPunch: The Shack Dwellers Movement in South Africa

http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/05/29/the-shack-dwellers-movement-in-south-africa/

by SARANEL BENJAMIN

Hundreds of shack dwellers descended upon the Durban High Court in support of Abahlali baseMjondolo’s court appearance to defend their right to remain on state-owned land in the eThekwini (Durban) municipality. The High Court case follows a Constitutional Court ruling against an interdict obtained by the Kwazulu-Natal Provincial Minister for Human Settlements. The interdict was used by the state to evict shack dwellers in the Marikana Land Occupation settlement in Cato Crest, Durban more than 12 times. In the process people’s shacks were demolished. Activists were shot at resulting in the deaths of Nqobile Nzuza who was just 17 years old, Nkululeko Gwala and Thembinkosi Qumbela. In Sisonke settlement in Lamontville, the same interdict was used to repeatedly evict and demolish shacks over 24 times. Continue reading

Thapelo Mohapi, chairperson of the Briardene AbM branch, speaking on xenophobia in Grahamstown with Fezokuhle Mthonti – 28 May 2015

Thapelo Mohapi, chairperson of the Briardene AbM branch, speaking on xenophobia in Grahamstown yesterday. Fezokuhle Mthonti was the other speaker on the panel. Other speakers included Ernest Wamba-dia-Wambia, Sizwe Mabizela and Michael Neocosmos as well as a representative of the Congolese Solidarity Campaign.

Understanding and Overcoming Xenophobia: A One Day Colloquium

UHURU PRESENTS:

UNDERSTANDING AND OVERCOMING XENOPHOBIA
A ONE DAY COLLOQUIUM

At the present moment, xenophobic practices in South Africa are taking a number of nefarious forms from the exclusion of foreign students and staff from universities through the denial of visas, to the systematic unleashing of mob and state violence against the weakest sections of our population. This violence in particular has gone so far as to invade the sanctuary of churches and has included the deployment of the military and not just the police against poor communities thus treating the latter as potential enemies. It has recently become clearer in fact that xenophobia is not a problem of poverty but primarily a problem of identity politics endemic to South Africa, a kind of politics which state institutions and their agents have been pursuing since the early 1990s. Most analyses reduce the question of xenophobia to one of criminality and poverty and deplore xenophobic practices without offering much in terms of ideas for a solution.

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GroundUp: When the state neglects property rights

http://groundup.org.za/article/when-state-neglects-property-rights_2963

Mary-Anne Gontsana

Fridges, stoves, furniture, televisions and microwaves are just some of the goods that residents claim are taken or damaged during evictions. Shack building materials are taken too. But what exactly happens to these goods once they are taken away? And what does the law say?

Last year, the community of Lwandle was in the spotlight, when hundreds of informal settlement residents were evicted from SANRAL owned land. During the evictions shacks were torn down and people were dispossessed of their belongings. Some people say they have never got their possessions back.

Veronica Lujabe “lost everything” during the Lwandle evictions and says she still gets emotional when she thinks about that day. “I have gone to the police to fill in an affidavit and lodge a claim for the things that I lost during the evictions, but till today I have heard nothing about my claim.

“I remember just staring that day watching about 30 men tear down my shack which had all of my belongings inside. We lost clothes, furniture, appliances and more important my children lost all their school books and textbooks. Things that could’ve been saved during that day also got lost or damaged because it was raining hard. That day traumatised not only me, but my children too,” said Lujabe.

Xolani Saziwa, who is on the community leadership committee in Lwandle said it was not easy getting belongings back once they had been taken by officials. “We were told that goods would be taken for safe-keeping in a place in Gordon’s Bay. Other belongings are just dumped somewhere. Then it is up to you to go and claim them, but that does not always work out. Goods are not labelled so it is hard to identify what belongs to who. At times during evictions, when the shack is being demolished, things get damaged because the demolishing is done without order or care,” said Saziwa. In such cases, “people need to be compensated.”

Zainab Abrahams, communications officer at the South African Board for Sheriffs, said goods were not confiscated on an eviction order, but merely removed from the premises to allow the owner to take proper unrestricted control over his property.

Abrahams explained that eviction orders should indicate to the sheriff where unclaimed goods should be stored. “If silent on this, it is taken out on the street or public area. Normally on an eviction order the sheriff is not required to remove and store the goods. If so instructed the sheriff should allow enough time for collection. This can have a cost implication, like transport and storage. With mass evictions, record keeping and labelling is problematic. The instruction on the [eviction order] should be clear.”

Councillor Benedicta van Minnen, the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Human Settlements, said that the City does “does not confiscate any goods at all and will occasionally only remove material, like wood and zinc, as a last resort.” She said, “This will only occur after the Anti-Land Invasion Unit (ALIU) has had to repeatedly demolish the same unlawful structure or structures. The removal of material is usually for safekeeping purposes only and the alleged offenders are free to collect it within a prescribed period, which is usually a month.”

Sometimes goods are damaged too. Lwazi Mlonyeni also lost his belongings during the Lwandle evictions. “I lost appliances, furniture, my bed. Everything. Because during the evictions, some shacks were demolished and some were set alight because they [the officials carrying out the evictions] wanted to make their job quicker. I have claimed for my goods, but since last year June, I have heard nothing about my claim. I have written to the sheriff’s office and I have opened a case with the police, but I have heard nothing. All I want is to be compensated for the things that I lost,” said Mlonyeni.

Sheldon Magardie is the director of the Legal Resources Centre in Cape Town. “This is a very serious problem,” he says. “In all the eviction cases we deal with, when the City stops an eviction as it is happening, or gets an interdict, the ALIU loads the material onto trucks and that’s the last people see of their materials. In some cases when people want their goods back, they are told to contact the ALIU.”

He says, “We never see the goods being catalogued. So there’s no way of determining what belongs to which person. They just take the goods and dump them at the ALIU offices. It’s very difficult for people to identify what’s theirs. Sometimes [the authorities] refuse to return material on the basis that it will spur further occupations.” But he explains that the law is clear on this. “There was a case ruled on by the appellate division that the person executing the eviction has no right to destroy the [occupant’s] materials in an eviction. I’m not aware of a law that allows materials to be confiscated.”

In that case which was ruled on by the Supreme Court of South Africa in 1993, Nigo Mpisi asked the court to award him damages because even though he had occupied land unlawfully, when his shack was taken down, the “constituent materials and the contents of the shack were set alight”. The court found in favour of Mpisi and awarded him R1,521 plus legal costs.

Magardie continues, “The Constitution makes it clear that no one can be arbitrarily deprived of their property. In this case the materials are not being treated with any degree of care or concern for the dignity of the owners. Because these materials are owned by people with meagre resources they [still] should not be treated [with any less respect].”

“The Constitutional Court and international human rights law make it clear that evictions must be carried out humanely,” says Magardie. “It has been difficult for us to litigate on this, because it has occurred in the context of large land occupations. By the time [these matters are] resolved the people who were removed have moved on.”

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The New Age: KZN court expected to rule on ban of land occupation

Note how Baloyi tries to divide the oppressed and shift the blame for the failures of the state by claiming that land occupations are slowing down the government’s housing programme.

http://www.thenewage.co.za/159653-1010-53-KZN_court_expected_to_rule_on_ban_of_land_occupation

The KwaZulu-Natal High Court is on Thursday expected to rule on the validity of a provincial government regulation banning occupations of land earmarked for housing and other state development by homeless people’s movement Abahlali baseMjondolo.

Abahlahli spokesperson Sbu Zikode said he is confident that they have reasonable ground to succeed on Thursday because they had no doubt that the order issued by provincial human settlements MEC Ravi Pillay last year to evict communities in Cato Crest and Lamontville was unlawful. Continue reading