Category Archives: Bheki Buthelezi

Bheki Buthelezi Arrested

Monday, 17 September 2012
Unemployed Peoples’ Movement Press Statement

Bheki Buthelezi Arrested

Comrade Bheki Buthelezi has been arrested again. He has been arrested on bogus charges of damage to property and assault.

Comrade Bheki is being arrested for the fifth time only in two months, between August and September 2012 and all charges withdrawn at court at a later stage. This is a sheer harassment of activists!

This is ridiculous.

We will give a detailed statement later today!

Ayanda Kota
0786256462

Tuesday, 18 September 2012
Unemployed Peoples’ Movement Press Statement

Bheki Buthelezi released on R1 500 bail

Bheki Buthelezi was detained overnight and police bail was refused. However he appeared in court this afternoon. UPM members and AbM members were there to support him. He was released on bail of R1 500 which was paid by members of the community in the Zakheleni shack settlement in Umlazi.

This arrest is part of the longstanding and ongoing pattern of repression of independent grassroots struggles around the country which has come to a head in Marikana. We call on all progressive forces in South Africa and around the world to unite against growing repression by the ANC and we strongly condemn the statement by COSATU, the SACP and the ANC in which trade unionists have shamefully joined the attempt to justify the outrageous repression in Marikana.

For comment please contact:

Bheki Buthelezi (KZN UPM spokesperson): 072 639 9893
Ayanda Kota (UPM spokesperson): 078 625 6462
Mnikelo Ndabankulu (AbM spokesperson): 081 309 5485

Four Arrests in Umlazi

Update: All four of the arrested comrades were released at 1:10 today. No bail was demanded. There was a vigorous protest outside the police station.

15 August 2012
Unemployed People’s Movement Press Statement

Four Arrests in Umlazi

On Sunday night the Zakheleni Crisis Committee led a march of hundreds of people on the police in Umlazi to demand that they make arrests with regard to the attempted murder of Bhekimuzi Ndlovu following the public screening of a video in which Ndlovu identified his attackers. The police responded by arresting the named individuals and by addressing a mass meeting in the settlement where the promised further investigations. After this the meeting dispersed peacefully.

Following this meeting the family of one of the men that was arrested went to the police and claimed that four leaders of the Zakheleni Crisis Committee had assaulted them. This is an outright fabrication. In fact the police were present in the settlement at the time of the alleged assault.  Continue reading

Two Arrests Made in Connection with the Shootings in Umlazi, Further Threats to Bheki Buthelezi

Monday, 13 August 2012
Unemployed People’s Movement Press Statement

Two Arrests Made in Connection with the Shootings in Umlazi, Further Threats to Bheki Buthelezi

On the 30th June Bhekimuzi Ndlovu was shot in the Zakheleni shack settlement following a series of protests against the Ward Councillor and for land, housing and other development. The case number is 225/07/2012.

Ndlovu had become close to Bheki Buthelezi and to the struggle that was being organised in the Zakheleni shack settlement. However he had been close to the local ANC and the councillor and so they saw him as a traitor. He was shot by supporters of the ruling party. They sacrificed him, like an animal. They thought that he was dead. After Ndlovu was shot the ANC supporters convened a meeting and said that Bheki Buthelezi was the one who had shot Ndlovu. It has become a typical tactic of repression for the ruling party to engage in violence against activists and to then blame the activists for this violence. However unbeknownst to the local ANC Ndlovu had survived the shooting and was in hospital.

Continue reading

Huge Police Raid on Bheki Buthelezi’s Shack

30 June 2012
AbM & UPM Press Statement

Update on Repression & Resistance in the Zakheleni Shack Settlement, Ward 88, Umlazi, Durban

At around 4:00 a.m. this morning a group of around 50 heavily armed police officers arrived at Bheki Buthelezi's shack in the Zakheleni shack settlement in Umlazi and demanded to search it. When confronted with the fact that they did not have a warrant they retired and then returned at around 4:50 with a document stating that they had a warrant to search the entire settlement. But they only searched Bheki's shack. They found nothing. During the search a helicopter with a search light hovered over the settlement. Ten activists, all of whom have become leaders in the rebellion in Ward 88, and all of whom have been warned that the police and local party leaders after after them, slipped away during the police raid and are now in hiding.

Continue reading

M&G: Umlazi uprising faces bullets, arrests

Note: There is a man in the area, Mr Zungu, that has been interested in contesting the councillor’s position – as is his democratic right. He and his home have been targeted in the repression. However the rebellion in Ward 88 has not been driven by Mr Zungu. It comes from legitimate and popular anger and has been expressed, at the request of the people, through the structures of Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Unemployed People’s Movement with the support of other grassroots organisations like the South Durban Community Environmental Alliance, the Wentworth Development Forum etc.

http://mg.co.za/article/2012-06-28-umlazi-uprising-faces-bullets-arrests

Umlazi uprising faces bullets, arrests

by Fatima Asmal-Motala

Tension is mounting southwest of Durban in Umlazi’s ward 88, where activists say the police are randomly arresting people and firing live ammunition.

Their right to protest has been violated, they say.


Bheki Buthelezi – Picture by Rogan Ward

“We are not free in Umlazi. The police are arresting and shooting people with real bullets.

People are in hospital as we speak,” a 34-year-old woman, who belongs to the ward 88 crisis committee, told the Mail & Guardian.
The woman said she did not want to be named because she feared for her life. “The police here are working with the councillors,” she said.

“We are protesting because we wanted the councillor to step down because she doesn’t deliver. She doesn’t respect us. Even if we call her, she doesn’t come to meet us.”

Bheki Buthelezi of the Unemployed People’s Movement, who is also a member of the ward 88 crisis committee, was one of 19 people arrested last weekend on charges of intimidation or public violence.

“We were going to meet on Saturday afternoon to formalise a programme to occupy the councillor’s office. But on Saturday morning the police arrested me without having a case against me,” he said.

Struck off the roll

“I was later released on R500 bail and told to appear in the magistrate’s court, but there was no magistrate there. I was told my case had been struck off the roll because there was no evidence against me and that the bail would be refunded.”

Buthelezi said service delivery protests in the area dated back to August last year.

“On June 8 we marched, demanding that the councillor, Nomzamo Mkhize, step down because she works with only certain people belonging to her camp. We handed a memorandum over to the manager of the office of the speaker in the eThekwini municipality and we gave it seven days to respond.”

He said that when they did not receive a response, community members gathered again and decided to occupy the councillor’s office.

“There were youth who were pushing to burn tyres on the street, but we said this was not the answer; we needed to find an alternative by formulating our own programme to see our ward being developed.”

Resolution

Buthelezi said the police were called in when the protesters arrived at Mkhize’s office on Wednesday afternoon.

“We then moved back to the ground where we usually meet. We heard that some people wanted to burn her office, but we took a resolution not to do so.

“About 3500 of us gathered to go to protect the office. On our way there we encountered the police, who began to shoot at people randomly. One person was shot in the leg and taken to hospital. Others were shot in their homes.

“We submitted our demands directly to the people who are supposed to respond to us, but they did not do so. They used the police to shoot people and arrest them.”

Buthelezi, who is a member of the Black Consciousness Party (BCP), insisted that the protests were not politically motivated.

“We are doing this as residents, not political parties. There are four political parties in the ward — the ANC, BCP, National Freedom Party and Inkatha Freedom Party — and we have all come together to raise issues of unemployment, housing, the landless and informal settlements.”

Issues of tenders

However, Mkhize disagreed with Buthelezi’s comments.

“I talk to every person in my ward. Some of these protesters are interested in issues of tenders, others are politically motivated,” the councillor said.

“There is service delivery in this area, but there are nominees who did not become councillors, so this is politically motivated.”

She said that she had been forced to ask the police to intervene. “What can I say when they march at night, coming towards my home? I had no choice.”

Mkhize said she would meet the protesters soon. “We will talk to the very same people who are toyi-toying and ask them what the problem is.

“When they marched, they gave their memorandum to the office of the speaker, which, to date, has not passed it on to me, so I don’t know what’s in it.”