Category Archives: councillors

Landless People’s Movement (LPM) Sees Through Local Government Divide and Rule Strategy

PRESS STATEMENT: 4 MARCH 2009

Landless People’s Movement (LPM) Sees Through Local Government Divide and Rule Strategy

The councillor in Protea South, an informal settlement in Soweto, has repeatedly stated that she is accountable to the ANC government and not to the community of Protea South. This has undermined the ability of the community to work closely with our councillor to meet our basic demands. It should be made clear that, whenever the community has a mass meeting, it is under the banner of the LPM who represents the majority of the people in Protea South. The community of Protea South has been living there for 20 years with no changes in living conditions.

The previous 2 councillors, who were elected to represent the people of Protea South in the new democratic South Africa, delivered nothing. Now that the current local councillor has also failed to bring any development whatsoever in the past 4 years, the LPM is demanding that the councillor step down and be replaced by a community representative that accounts to the people of Protea South instead of any political party.

In Protea South, we have a Community Policing Forum (CPF). The CPF, by remaining part of the government structure, has unfortunately been unable to assist the community in meeting its demands. According to the CPF rules and regulations, one can either voluntarily become a member of the CPF to protect the interests of the community, or they can be elected by the community. But, even if one has volunteered to be a CPF member, they have to introduce themselves to the community. But, the CPFs in Protea South never did that. Instead, they were selected by the ANC leadership. And it is clear that this was done to protect the interests of the councilor and ANC members. The councillor bribes CPF members with food vouchers and this is also a strategy we see the ANC undertaking as we work towards the 2009 elections. Here, the strategy creates the danger that the CPF will be biased in favour of the government, thereby undermining the CPF’s ability to protect the community at large.

This happened on Sunday the 1st March when we, as the LPM, submitted our memorandum in the community hall of Protea South. The councillor started to interrupt us by singing while we were submitting it, and she was supported by the CPF members who backed her in chorus. That is when the community and CPF members started to exchange harsh words. The CPF members were not protecting the community as a whole, but protecting the ANC councillor.

The divisions in the community unfortunately led the community to turn against each other in violence. After the meeting, two members of the CPF were beaten up by the community with stones and fists and they were sent to the hospital. On the following day, three members of the community were beaten by the CPF members and one was taken to the hospital. As a result, the community was angry that the CPF members were fighting with them and some community members felt that they should be removed from Protea South as they no longer recognised the CPF as community members. But, the leaders of the LPM condemned that as they saw that this was dividing the community.

CPF members in Protea South are part of a further systemic problem since they are being used to make sure that the leaders of community movements such as the LPM are behind bars. They are even being used to lie, as witnesses of the state, thereby blaming activists for crimes that they did not commit. On the same Sunday, the CPF later identified Maureen Mnsisi, and other activists, to the police who were then arrested. The activists were finally released from Protea Magistrate Court Wednesday on bail. It will soon be proven to the public that these activists were unjustly arrested as they are guilty of no crimes whatsoever. In fact, they were trying to stop the violence that had begun between the CPF and the community earlier that day. If the police, the government and the CPF were honest, what these activists should really be charged with is their attempts to bring about peace and to claim a kind of mass power that can protect the poor from a government in power that is only willing to account to itself.

The leaders of the LPM see that the members of the CPF are people who are also affected by the same issues, as we are all poor. While we are fighting our struggles, we are also fighting for them. But the CPF could not see that because the councillor had won them through the favour of these food vouchers. The system is pushing to get us to fight against each other. But, if we did so, that would be a loss for the poor communities and a win for the government because they would have succeeded in their divide and rule strategy. When we are divided and fighting against one another, it is easier for the councillor to get through us and easier to suppress our demands. Maureen Mnsisi explained this at an LPM community meeting when she said that the system uses a poor person against another poor person and that this makes our voice suddenly become quiet. That is why the leaders of the LPM decided that we need not to attack the CPF, but to teach them and let them come and join us in our struggle so that the poor can claim community control over development and be united as one.

The apartheid government also tried to tear communities apart by bribing individuals to turn on community leaders. We will not fall for this any more and we will not except this in our new democracy. Now that the leaders of the LPM have been released from police custody, we have elected 40 people who can serve to protect the interests of our whole community, not a select few. We must ensure that CPFs work independently from the government so that they can protect and support (rather than suppress and disempower) all members of our communities including those acting as leaders and representatives.

Authors:

Bongani Xezwi – LPM Protea South Youth Organiser (071-043-2221)

Luke Sinwell – Researcher and Activist, University of Johannesburg (079-144-4323)

LPM: Youth in Protea South Demand that Councillor Step Dow

Youth in Protea South Demand that Councillor Step Down

The Landless People’s Movement (LPM) in Protea South is thankful for all the support that organisations and individuals have provided over the past week especially as we seek to revive the LPM across Gauteng and hopefully reunite it with the landless people in South Africa and around the world. Your solidarity has given us strength and encouragement and we are as determined as ever to push forward the struggle of the poor in our battle against injustice. No amount of threats by the government, the police or by individuals will stop us from fighting for our rights.

Currently, the youth in Protea South are organising a march on the 27th March to force our local councilor to step down. Our councillor must be held accountable to the poor people in Protea South, not to those in power. The pamphlet for the march is attached. All are welcome, especially the press and anyone interested in our struggle, as we hope to publicise our demands. As the LPM is currently in the process of reviving itself, it lacks the resources it needs to sustain its activities, particularly sound (loud hailers), transport, and material for banners (please contact the persons below if you can assist in any way).

We are confident that justice will be served:

“We Shall Overcome”

For more information contact:

Bongani, the Youth Coordinator in Protea South, at: 071 043 2221

Maureen at: 082 337 4514

or, Luke at: 079 144 4323

Leader of Landless People’s Movement (LPM) Fears for her Life and Children: Calls for Solidarity and Advice from all Comrades

12 March 2009

Leader of Landless People’s Movement (LPM) Fears for her Life and Children: Calls for Solidarity and Advice from all Comrades

Maureen Mnisi, with comrades Kajola Thebola, Lekhtho Mtetwa & Maas van Wyk – in Maureen’s home in the Protea South settlement, November 2008

As a single mother of five and a prominent activist who has come under threat by the police, government and now even the middle-class in her own community, Maureen Msisi asks for solidarity and advice to give her more courage to push forward the struggle of the poor. This is not the first time that Maureen’s life and family has been in danger because of her campaigns for the interests of poor people. In 1995, Maureen formed the branch of the ANC in Protea South hoping it would bring about a change that would better our lives. But members of the local civic at the time felt that she was challenging their power and they responded violently by attacking her. She was shot in the back and stabbed 3 times with a machete, breaking her leg and scarring her neck and hand. Almost 15 years into our new democracy, she continues struggling for the same changes in the lives of her people in Protea South, but now under the banner of the LPM. Today, she fears that if she continues on with the struggle, her life and her children’s futures will be in danger.

On the 1st March 2009, Maureen, and 7 others, were arrested and charged with public violence, assault GBH, intimidation, and unlawful gathering, and it will soon be made clear to the public that they are innocent of all charges. The LPM in Protea South views these arrests as a method by the local government councillor to suppress any activism that undermines the government’s plans to remove all informal settlements from Protea South to a far away place called Doorenkop.

Now that Maureen and the seven other comrades are going to court on the 25th March, the people in the bond houses in Protea South, the middle-class, are taking an additional step to ensure that Maureen does not remain in her community. They are signing a petition to say that she must be removed because she is promoting violence, only represents foreigners, and is blocking development in the area. The petition will submitted on the 25th March at Protea Magistrate Court as a piece of evidence to ensure that she is proven guilty. It is believed that this will assist the middle-class bond house owners because the informal settlements will go away, the bond houses will remain, and their property values will go up. The people in the bond houses seem to think that if our leader no longer lives in Protea South, the demands of the people to remain there will disappear and that people will live peacefully in Protea South.

But in reality, if Maureen is forced to leave Protea South, this will not stop the people from organising and fighting for their right to choose whether or not they want to stay or go to Doorenkop and it will not stop the government from neglecting other basic demands that are made by the poor in Protea South. If Maureen is forced to leave, the government, the police, and the community, including those who own bond houses, will be in danger because chaos and aggression will win our people over.

The truth of the matter is that Maureen has been at the forefront of maintaining peace and stability at a time when Protea South has been bordering on the edge of war. Maureen was responsible for stopping community members from attacking each other and burning each other’s shacks after a conflict on the 1st March when Community Policing Forum (CPF) members started to sing with the local government councillor while the LPM community were reading their memorandum. She convinced the community members that fighting another poor person weakens the struggle and strengthens the government’s system. After this, members of the community left Protea South to destroy the transit shack camps across the road, which are intended to accommodate people before they move to houses in Doorenkop.

When the local government councillor of Protea South learned about this, even she acknowledged Maureen’s power to maintain peace in her community when she called Maureen, who was in her home at the time and did not know about the incident, to stop this destruction.

Yesterday we had an urgent executive LPM meeting in Protea South to address the petition that was being made by the people living in the bond houses. Some members suggested that we call a mass meeting in Protea South to explain the truth that lies behind the petition against Maureen. But Maureen felt that if we call a mass meeting, it will create further divisions and also a war between the informal settlement and bond houses of Protea South. While the people living in the bond houses want the informal settlement to be removed, those in the informal settlements have actually been living there since the 1980s.

The people living in bond houses are now claiming the land as their own, based on the fact that they own property, when in fact we arrived here first. Like our current government, they have made it a matter of who has money and who doesn’t because the informal settlement, those who are poor and landless, are now being asked to leave. By claiming that Maureen only represents foreigners and is promoting violence, the owners of the bond houses hope to suppress our basic demands.

To achieve our demands without spilling blood in Protea South, the LPM has begun to create a counter petition which depicts the truth. The truth is that since 1995, Maureen has risked her life, and even been attacked, in order to represent the interests of the people living in Protea South. She continues to do so up until today as she remains committed to her people’s futures, despite the threats that she, and her family, are faced with. Her commitments, both as an activist and as a single parent of 5, have placed her in a situation that puts great pressure on her as an individual, and it is taking all of her strength to keep her morale high. She is calling upon all comrades to display solidarity with her if possible and wants to know if there is some advice or assistance she can get from comrades to make her more encouraged in this tough time.

Written by
-Bongani Xezwi (071-043-2221), youth organiser of LPM Protea South Branch and eldest son of Maureen Msisi
-With Luke Sinwell, Researcher and Activist, University of Johannesburg

Words of advice or solidarity can be sent to: Maureen at: 082-337-4514
Or emailed to: LSinwell@yahoo.com