Category Archives: Dan Plato

AEC: March to the Mayor on 2 July 2010 at 10 AM

March to the Mayor on 2 July 2010 at 10 AM

Wednesday last week, we planned to have a march to the Mayor to invite him to our Poor People’s World Cup. Unfortunately we heard that the mayor was not there to accept our memorandum. This is why we have chosen to reschedule the march to this week. On Friday the 2nd of July 2010 at 10 AM we are going to march with 500 residents from Blikkiesdorp and from surrounding communities affected by the FIFA World Cup, to the Civic Centre to hand over a memorandum to the mayor at 10.45 AM.

Information about the march:

This march is organized by the Delft Anti-Eviction Campaign to invite Dan Plato and FIFA to the finals of the Poor People’s World Cup.

Furthermore, this march is to support all the displaced communities now living in Blikkiesdorp (the Symphony Way TRA, 20 km away from the city centre) as a result of World Cup regeneration projects. Many of these residents were promised proper houses before moving to this “concentration camp” with tin can structures – far away from the city centre and from job opportunities, good education, their social networks, etc.

In solidarity with these residents now living in this relocation area – soccer teams, coaches and communities that are involved in the Poor People’s World Cup plus the informal traders affected by the FIFA World Cup – will also support and join this march on Friday!

The Delft Anti-Eviction Campaign invites all the media to this march and everyone who wants to support this march is more than welcome!!

Location: the march will proceed at 10 AM from Cape Town’s Keizersgracht (close to Cape Peninsula University) to the Civic Centre to hand over a memorandum to Mayor Dan Plato at 10.45 AM.

***Important notification***

The third Poor People’s World Cup was unfortunately cancelled last Sunday, because we were unable to get a venue. The next (3rd) tournament will be held on Sunday 4 July 2010 at 9 AM in Delft Central Sports Field (main road in Delft).

For more information, please contact: Jane Roberts 0742384236 (AEC coordinator for the Delft area), Kareema 078 6207365 (resident of Blikkiesdorp) or Ashraf Cassiem 0761861408 g (chairperson AEC)

Sowetan: Council takes back toilets

http://www.sowetan.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=1147720

Council takes back toilets
02 June 2010
Anna Majavu and Sapa

Eleven people were arrested in the Cape Town township of Khayelitsha as protests over toilets continued, Western Cape police said.

Captain Anneke van der Vyver said the suspects will appear in court today on charges of public violence.

The N2 highway was blocked with burning tyres until lunch time yesterday.

The protests began at 5.30am yesterday, with residents burning tyres over the city’s decision to remove their toilets completely.

On Monday, Cape Town mayor Dan Plato authorised officials to swoop on Makhaza, in Khayelitsha, and remove 65 toilets.

He said the toilets would only be returned once the residents had erected their own enclosures.

Plato claimed that the residents had promised in 2007 that if the city gave them one toilet each, they would build their own enclosures.

But several residents told Sowetan last week that they never made such a promise. They demanded that the city build proper concrete rooms for their outside toilets.

Community organisations have slammed both the ANC and DA.

Abahlali baseMjondolo activist Mzonke Poni, from QQ Section in Khayelitsha, accused the ANC of “using the poor for their own political gain ahead of next year’s elections”.

“The DA was also wrong – they should have held proper talks with the people, whether they felt they were led by the ANC Youth League or not. Removing people’s toilets is a complete waste of taxpayers money,” he said.

The Social Justice Coalition’s Angy Peter, who lives in nearby RR section, also slammed the ANCYL and DA.

Peter said her organisation “condemns the incitement of violence by the ANCYL”.

But she warned that the removal of the toilets was unconstitutional because everyone has a right to sanitation.

“Instead of rising above the dispute and reconciling with the residents of Makhaza, the city has embarked on collective punishment,” she said.

“The removal of the toilets without any notice is unreasonable. Residents have gone from having an unacceptable level of sanitation (open air toilets) to no sanitation whatsoever.”

Peter slammed Plato’s call on Monday for residents to burn tyres against the ANC.

“These words are also tantamount to incitement.

“As a leader we expect him to bring calm to such situations, not to put people’s lives at risk by fuelling the fire,” said Peter.

Cape Times: Fears of more service delivery protests

http://www.capetimes.co.za/?fSectionId=306&fArticleId=vn20090801124620390C894661

Fears of more service delivery protests
1 August 2009, 14:43
By VUYO MABANDLA

Protests could continue next week if the city authorities do not respond to a list of demands from a Khayelitsha community.

Simmering tensions in Khayelitsha’s informal settlements were diffused two weeks after people marched to Mayor Dan Plato’s office to hand over a list of demands for services.

The protesters laid down a two-week deadline but by yesterday Plato had not responded. If he misses Monday’s deadline residents from parts of Khayelitsha and Macassar Village nearby say they will take to the streets.

Mzonke Poni, chairperson of lobby group Abahlali Basemjondolo, said residents will “express their outrage”.

A shack dweller in Macassar Village, Andiswa Kolamisi, said, “Here in Macassar we live in the gutter in tattered structures, practically homeless. We live on a hilltop because we have no land to build anything on.”

Rulleska Singh, Plato’s spokesperson, said the city was working on assessing the memorandum and that they could possibly respond on Monday.

She added she was not aware of any potential protests, but “we have notified them that we are working on (the review)”.

But on Friday Poni denied that the Abahlali leadership had been contacted by the city.

“They are lying. They had not notified us of anything.”

On Thursday hundreds of Masiphumelele residents near Kommetjie took to the streets.

It was later revealed that they were refusing to move to a temporary site in Delft, to make way for a new housing project.

A violent clash resulted in chaos as police opened fire with rubber bullets on residents who threw rubbish and debris across streets.

Mayoral committee member Felicity Purchase was stoned while attempting to address the crowd. According to reports, she had to retreat under police guard.

Twelve people were arrested for public violence and will appear in the Simon’s Town Magistrate’s Court soon.

Cape Argus: Mayor pleads for patience on relocation

The City has been promising to move QQ residents to Bardale for almost a decade. They are tired of sitting back and being patient while their homes are flooded.

http://www.capeargus.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5087181

July 17, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

SOME of the residents of the flooded QQ informal settlement in Khayelitsha who staged fierce service delivery protests earlier this week will only be relocated to dry land next year, says Mayor Dan Plato.

Plato said yesterday that about 300 families from the QQ and RR sections in Site B would be moved to the Bardale temporary relocation area next October.
Residents of Burundi in Mfuleni, who had been worst affected by the recent floods, were in the process of being relocated there, he explained.

In that community, residents had been living under “dramatically worse and inhumane conditions”.

“We are relocating people from the pond onto dry land. We cannot relocate everyone at the same time.

“Communities need to trust us. They need to work with us. We won’t allow people to invade land,” he said.

On the Bardale site, residents would have access to electricity and other services while waiting for proper housing units from the government, Plato added.

The QQ settlement, which was rocked by violent protests on Tuesday and Wednesday, was relatively quiet yesterday afternoon.

But Landsdowne Road, which runs through the area, was still littered with smouldering barricades that had been erected during the protest.

A group of residents, mainly children, occasionally tried unsuccessfully to block the flow of traffic by pushing tyres on to the road.

Mzonke Poni, chairman of housing lobby group Abahlali baseMjondolo (”Shack Dwell-ers”), which had mastermind-ed the protest, said it was over “for now”.

Resident Funeka Mkwambi, 57, whose makeshift house is built on a seasonal wetland commonly referred to as the “Waterfront”, said the protest had been justified.

Mkwambi, who lives with seven other relatives, said that each time the area became flooded, “we have to live in water”.

And after this week’s floods, she was forced to wear gumboots to get access to their home.

“It’s not right. You only take them (gumboots) off when you are climbing on to a bed to sleep,” she said, wading through her flooded forecourt to check on her laundry drying on a line outside.

“It’s hard to live here. My three children and I suffer from asthma.

“Last night I couldn’t sleep, but we don’t have anywhere else to go,” she said, struggling for breath.

Poni said that because of the “harsh living conditions”, tuberculosis was rife in the community.

Cape Argus: Mayor pleads for patience on relocation

The City has been promising to move QQ residents to Bardale for almost a decade. They are tired of sitting back and being patient while their homes are flooded.

http://www.capeargus.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5087181

July 17, 2009 Edition 1
Francis Hweshe – Cape Argus

SOME of the residents of the flooded QQ informal settlement in Khayelitsha who staged fierce service delivery protests earlier this week will only be relocated to dry land next year, says Mayor Dan Plato.

Plato said yesterday that about 300 families from the QQ and RR sections in Site B would be moved to the Bardale temporary relocation area next October.
Residents of Burundi in Mfuleni, who had been worst affected by the recent floods, were in the process of being relocated there, he explained.

In that community, residents had been living under “dramatically worse and inhumane conditions”.

“We are relocating people from the pond onto dry land. We cannot relocate everyone at the same time.

“Communities need to trust us. They need to work with us. We won’t allow people to invade land,” he said.

On the Bardale site, residents would have access to electricity and other services while waiting for proper housing units from the government, Plato added.

The QQ settlement, which was rocked by violent protests on Tuesday and Wednesday, was relatively quiet yesterday afternoon.

But Landsdowne Road, which runs through the area, was still littered with smouldering barricades that had been erected during the protest.

A group of residents, mainly children, occasionally tried unsuccessfully to block the flow of traffic by pushing tyres on to the road.

Mzonke Poni, chairman of housing lobby group Abahlali baseMjondolo (”Shack Dwell-ers”), which had mastermind-ed the protest, said it was over “for now”.

Resident Funeka Mkwambi, 57, whose makeshift house is built on a seasonal wetland commonly referred to as the “Waterfront”, said the protest had been justified.

Mkwambi, who lives with seven other relatives, said that each time the area became flooded, “we have to live in water”.

And after this week’s floods, she was forced to wear gumboots to get access to their home.

“It’s not right. You only take them (gumboots) off when you are climbing on to a bed to sleep,” she said, wading through her flooded forecourt to check on her laundry drying on a line outside.

“It’s hard to live here. My three children and I suffer from asthma.

“Last night I couldn’t sleep, but we don’t have anywhere else to go,” she said, struggling for breath.

Poni said that because of the “harsh living conditions”, tuberculosis was rife in the community.