Category Archives: Blikkies Dorp

Sowetan: We’d rather die than move away

http://www.sowetan.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=1075866

We’d rather die than move away
08 October 2009
Anna Majavu

Residents fight bid to relocate them

“WE are prepared to die rather than be moved to the city of Cape Town’s temporary relocation area.”

These are the words of a group of about 400 people who yesterday appeared in the Western Cape high court fighting off a city bid to move them to Blikkiesdorp.

The temporary relocation area with its rows of corrugated iron one-roomed “houses” has been nicknamed Blikkiesdorp, or “Tin Can Town” by the 5000 people who currently live there.

The 400 people living in shacks built along a pavement in Delft, Cape Town, yesterday won a nine- day reprieve from eviction in the Western Cape high court.

They were living in different backyards in Delft until Democratic Alliance councillor Frank Martin unlawfully issued them with a letter authorising them to occupy newly built N2 Gateway national government houses.

A few months later they were evicted by the government, but their backyard shacks had already been rented to other tenants.

While Martin escaped serious punishment from the council, which suspended him for a month, the 500 people were left to set up home on the nearest roadside.

Yesterday local tabloid headlines screamed “Helen Zille’s Blikkiesdorp descends into a lawless hell”.

The leader of residents of Symphony Way, Roger Wicks, told Sowetan: “We are prepared to die rather than go to Blikkiesdorp.”

Wicks backed tabloid reports that Blikkiesdorp was full of drug dealers, alcoholism, and that it lacked any form of safety since police did not patrol there. He condemned Western Cape Premier Helen Zille for “using the coloured people for our votes and making us a lot of false promises about houses”.

Blikkiesdorp resident Willy Heyn said he advised people not to move to Blikkiesdorp, which had neither electricity nor street lighting, and which was 28km from the city centre.

A visit by Sowetan to Blikkiesdorp found the area in total darkness at night, and also found several families forced to share each toilet and tap.

City of Cape Town spokesperson Kylie Hatton confirmed that Eskom would not be installing electricity there until December 21.

The city’s advocate, Rob Stelzner, asked Judge Jake Moloi to hand down an eviction order suspended for nine days. Stelzner said the city was prepared to hold negotiations with Symphony Way residents during that time.

But Judge Moloi ordered the parties to negotiate and then come back to court on October 19 to argue their case in full.

It was revealed in court that the temporary relocation area, with its 1500 structures, cost the city R30million to build.

M&G: ‘Dumping ground’ for unwanted people

http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-10-09-dumping-ground-for-unwanted-people

‘Dumping ground’ for unwanted people
YAZEED KAMALDIEN | CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA – Oct 09 2009 06:00

A man with discoloured skin — dying alone in a shack of Aids — speaks volumes about conditions in Blikkiesdorp, described as a “dumping ground” for unwanted people in Cape Town.

Set up in the Cape Flats settlement of Delft, primarily to stifle illegal invasions of newly constructed houses in the N2 Gateway Project, it has seen the resettlement of other people who have been relocated or evicted, including squatters ousted from Salt River’s derelict Junction Hotel.

Tensions were stirred when refugees displaced by xenophobic violence and held at the Blue Waters refugee camp were recently moved to the site.

The city’s official name for Blikkiesdorp — named after its 1 300 3m x 6m zinc structures — is the Symphony Way Temporary Relocation Area. It is a deceptively soothing name for a sink of poverty, crime and disease.

According to city spokesperson Kylie Hatton, it is one of the Cape Town’s 223 informal settlements. Costing taxpayers R32-million to construct, Hatton said it is expected to grow to about 1 600 structures with a population of about 5 000.

She strenuously denied that it is a depository for the unwanted, saying “it compares extremely favourably with all the other [settlements] with respect to services, shelter, environment and density”.

“It’s an emergency area in terms of a national housing programme for people in emergency living conditions.”

But Warda Jina, among Blikkiesdorp’s first residents, disagrees. “This is just our dumping ground. It was a bad idea to expand the place and it’s getting worse.

“The government said it was temporary accommodation and we’d be moved to houses. They’re lying. We don’t know how long we’re going to live here — maybe 20 years.”

Ironically, the shack-dwellers initially faced threats from others who are even less fortunate who wanted to move into their structures.

“The refugees now have what others want. The same thing happened to us. People would bang on our windows and threaten to throw us out.”

Jina said the refugees have been moved to a place of “crime and drugs next to the bush of evil” — a reference to the vast shrub-covered area surrounding Blikkiesdorp, where she and a friend stumbled across a murdered child’s body.

Blikkiesdorp resident Samsam Ahmad, a Somali refugee who has two small children, has warned other refugees still living in Blue Waters that Blikkiesdorp is not a safe alternative. She fears death and cannot sleep.

“We were told we’re going to get protection but our lives are in danger. Every night people knock on our doors and say they want to burn us. My children’s lives are at risk. We don’t sleep at night and don’t know how long we will stay here,” says Ahmad.

Eddie Swartz, one of 18 members of the community committee, told the Mail & Guardian that at least 2 500 residents that need medical care and “most of them are HIV-positive”. Swartz also chairs the health committee.

“Things are very critical. Patients get anti-retroviral drugs from the Delft clinic but they don’t have food. We have some help from NGOs but we need a container with 24-hour healthcare. Patients will die if there’s no ambulance to fetch them,” said Swartz.

“We also have a TB problem. We have only three health volunteers. We know we’re not going to get houses but we can’t die here. We’re not animals.”

Charlene May, a Legal Resources Centre attorney, said the LRC was preparing do legal battle with thecity, which is seeking an order to evict about 300 refugees still at Blue Waters.

Moving refugees to Blikkiesdorp had been was part of out-of-court negotiations which were now frozen.

“No one else who was considering moving [to Blikkiesdorp] will move there now,” said May.

Hatton said Blikkiesdorp has access to the Delft Community Health Centre 2,5km away. Residents also received TB and child health care.