Category Archives: Balfour

Zuma’s Crocodile Tears Make Way for World Cup Visitors

Zuma’s Crocodile Tears Make Way for World Cup Visitors

Jacob Zuma visited Balfour about two weeks ago, for the second time, where there were some of the most militant service delivery protest last year in July 2009 and even this year. The first time when he was in Balfour, he said he was there to investigate for himself what is happening. This time around, when he was there he said he is there also to investigate. So, for how long will Jacob Zuma be investigating rather than taking an action? It makes me wonder whether he was not trying to cool the people of Balfour and others that he visited so that service delivery protests don’t erupt. When it erupted in Balfour this year, almost the entire country was burning as a result. That was just a desperate measure for Jacob Zuma to come to Balfour without a proper programme to improve our lives. That’s why he was booed by the masses that day. We patiently waited for him, but he gave us nothing tangible.

Jacob Zuma has been going around the country to the most militant and dissatisfied areas to make sure that, come the world cup tournament, marginalised people don’t protest and embarrass South Africa in front of an international media spot light. What he is doing is like locking your children in a room so that they don’t cry that they are hungry in front of a guest. He actually just wants service delivery protests not to erupt when the rest of the world is in our country. We have seen Zuma visiting squatter camps and other dilapidated areas where people eat left-overs from the dustbin of the rich. He was using the same strategy the former president Mbeki was using when campaigning for election, promising people heaven and earth.

Zuma almost cried, so he said, when visiting our townships… Where have you been all these years Zuma? Is he not coming from Enkandla? Does he not know that people live in a mad house and go to bed with an empty stomach in Enkandla and many other places he has not visited? Has he never ever noticed people on the side of the street begging for money and food? Ok, I just forgot he is moving around with a siren and blue lights on his car. That was crocodile tears.

Lifu Nhlapo: Activist and Researcher from Balfour

Cell: 072 999 6869

Solidarity March in Balfour

SOLIDARITY MARCH TO BE HELD:

Our Struggle in Balfour is the struggle in all poor communities that have not benefited from the fruits of this so-called democracy

When: 4 March 2010 at 10:00am

Where: Library Gardens, Corner Fraser & Market Streets in Town and march to Luthuli House, ANC Head Office

The struggle of Balfour is the struggle of Diepsloot, Soweto, Alexandra, Kennedy Road, Motse, Sharpville, Orange Farm, across the Vaal and all poor communities that suffer from government neglect and repression. We have been pressuring the government for community control over basic rights such as land, housing, jobs, education, healthcare and sports facilities. The government has resorted to police repression including by shooting us with rubber bullets and arresting key leaders. Some of us have been forced into exile away from our friends and families. But, we are planning to continue with the struggle. We are saying “Aluta Continua!” even if they arrest us or kill us. It was happening in the struggle against apartheid where some were killed or tortured and this will not stop us today. We call all activists to create a common agenda that will advance and champion everyone who has been cheated by the government and excluded from the fruits of democracy.

· When government fails to keep promises, we must force them to listen!

· Working together we become stronger!

· We must have freedom to express ourselves without fear or intimidation by the police or government authorities!

· Private sector must stop exploiting workers and communities and taking our resources for their own benefit! Fat cats must not grow rich at the expense of the majority!

· The majority must benefit from Democracy! Nationalise the wealth of the country! Free education! Free health! Jobs and Recreation for all!

Contact:

Thabo 078 129 7797
Lifu 072 999 6869
Luke 079 144 4323

Sowetan: It’s not xenophobia

http://www.sowetan.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=1041226

It’s not xenophobia

29 July 2009
Peter Alexander and Peter Pfaffe

Promises made but nothing has happened

CONCERN that service delivery protests will degenerate into xenophobic violence was fuelled by reports from Balfour, Mpumalanga.

But there is a history of opposition to xenophobia in Balfour’s township, Siyathemba. An analysis of the protest must take a different form.

This was said by Mohammed Waqas, spokesman for 30 foreign nationals, mostly Ethiopians, gathered outside Balfour police station.

“The people are right”, he said. “I’ve lived in Balfour for five years. I didn’t see the government build any road, any new houses. They didn’t do anything for the people.”

Lefu Nhlapho and Andile Matiwane, leaders of the present movement, recalled their intervention in a community meeting in May 2008. Local business leaders wanted foreign traders kicked out of the township but the duo countered arguments around crime and competition and blocked potentially dangerous xenophobia.

After the May 2008 xenophobia violence the Siyathemba community organised a sports day that brought locals and foreign nationals together. Locals with a little money provided a braai. Such was opposition to xenophobic violence that refugees from other townships fled to Balfour.

The recent violence flared up after a community meeting on July 19. As people left the meeting, police fired rubber bullets, teargas and, according to some residents, live ammunition. There was another attack the following morning.

Simple barricades of large stones and burning tyres were erected in an attempt to block armoured Nyalas from moving around the township.

Protesters set fire to two buildings: a small municipal office and a partially ruined school store. On the Monday, in the course of the rioting, foreign-owned shops were looted.

Looting is a common practice in rioting everywhere. Indeed, we were shown South African-owned shops that had suffered this fate during the anti-apartheid struggle.

Unlike May 2008 the attacks were on the property of foreign nationals, not their bodies, and there is no evidence that looters were demanding “they must go”.

Why were South African- owned shops spared? One possibility is that their owners remained in the township, unlike foreign traders. Significantly, Zimbabweans, Malawians and other non-South Africans living in the location were not attacked.

If there was anti-foreigner sentiment it was limited and condemned by all. A protest leader told us that people wanted foreign traders to return “because they are cheap and we befriended them”.

Waqas confirmed that there were “very good relations” with township residents. He said they greeted South African shopkeepers rather than talking or visiting each other.

While xenophobia has been exaggerated, almost no attention has been paid to the police brutality that occurred. We saw two examples, but were told there were others.

One was a fifteen-year-old boy who had allegedly been shot with rubber bullets. Another was a young mother. Dragged from her hiding place under a bed, she had her stomach ripped apart by a rubber bullet.

Siyathemba is a desperately poor township where many residents lack electricity, water and sewerage.

The community submitted a memorandum to the Dipaleseng Municipality on July 8 2009. Most demands concerned basic issues such as a request for a police station, a mini- hospital and high-mass lights.

Topping the list were calls for a skills training centre and policies governing job recruitment in the area.

These reflect the fact that while the protest was backed by the community, leadership was provided by the township’s youth. It is this generation that suffers most from unemployment and lack of housing. Moreover, many of the older leaders are now politicians and tender-seekers.

The council failed to respond to the July 8 memorandum, hence the July 19 meeting voted for a stayaway. Some activists suspect that police violence was aimed at intimidating them. It had the reverse effect. People fought back and the stay-away lasted four days.

On Saturday we attended a meeting called by the Dipaleseng Youth Forum, made up of young men and women with matric certificates but no jobs. Forum spokesperson Sakhela Maya is a Wits graduate.

The meeting was militant, democratic and passed a motion of no confidence in the mayor and councillors. They were given a week to respond.

On Monday a meeting called by deputy ministers and local stakeholders asked for a reconsideration of this deadline. It remains to be seen whether this will happen.

It is clear that the failure of the authorities to deliver very basic services has given rise to the new movement. Waqas linked this to the election. Promises were made, he said, but nothing happened.

From Balfour, we should not fear xenophobia. What we face is a new generation fighting for basic rights that democracy has failed to deliver.