Category Archives: Eyewitness News

Newspaper articles on the 1 October protest in Cape Town

Click here to see some pictures from this protest.

http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/klapmuts-protesters-block-road-1.1394377#.UGr94ZhFyFd

Klapmuts protesters block road

Jason Felix

Klapmuts residents vented their frustration against poor services and houses in a protest that started at 5am, barricading roads.

They marched on the Klapmuts Main Road, burned tyres tree stumps and road signs, chanted and sang Struggle songs. They protested about a poor sanitation, roads and formal housing.

Protesters blocked the road with dirt, rocks and broken concrete water pipes. Some 50 residents protested on Main Road, while a group of about 400 sat on a field next to it.

Negotiations between police and community leaders failed after local ward councillor Sophia Louw did not arrive to address the protesting residents.

Police warned protesters to disperse but they ignored the this.

After an hour, at 6am, police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at the crowd. Protesters ran between shacks and houses.

Motorists passing the area were turned away by protesters who threatened to stone cars if they passed.

The situation calmed down, but at 1pm two police Nyalas drove into the area and all the residents re-grouped and took to the streets again.

Police again fired rubber bullets and tear gas at the crowd. Residents jumped over a wall of a sports field to get away from them.

Community leader Malibongwe Gebha said some residents had been on a housing waiting list for 20 years, and were promised formal housing in August last year.

“The municipality told us that houses will be built once the land was bought from its owner. The land was bought this year and we thought we are going to move in, only to be told that residents from [nearby] Koelenhof will have to move in [instead],” Malibongwe said.

“We want our houses and we will not stop at anything. Until our demands have been met we will protest,” he said.

Anneline Damonse, 44, who is unemployed, said the municipality had promised her a house since she had moved to the area in 1989.

“Since I started living in a shack, we were promised houses. We looked forward to having decent toilets, a nice home and running water. This was all just empty promises made,” she said.

Meanwhile, in the city centre, more than 400 residents of Samora Machel and Sweet Homes Farm in Philippi marched from Keizergracht Road to the offices of the MEC for Human Settlements, Bonginkosi Madikizela, to hand over a memorandum of demands yesterday.

Madikizela’s spokesperson, Bruce Oom, said the memorandum was received by the department and would be checked.

Shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo organised the march and mobilised residents from the areas “because the government has sidelined the poor”, said its provincial chairperson Mthobela Qona.

“We will fight for poor people living in unacceptable conditions. Residents of the area live without toilets and they have been promised formal houses for years now.”

In August nearly 500 residents from the settlements closed several roads, demanding sanitation, housing and electricity.

The city is unable to provide services because the land is privately owned.

Sweet Home Farm community leader Siyambuleka James said they would protest until their demands were met.

http://ewn.co.za/2012/10/01/Housing-MEC-receives-memorandum

Housing MEC receives memorandum

Rahima Essop

CAPE TOWN – Western Cape Human Settlements MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela on Monday received a memorandum of demands from protesting shack dwellers.

Dozens of residents from three informal settlements marched on the provincial legislature earlier in the day.

Sweet Home Farm community leader, Siyamboleka James, said residents want basic services and homes.

“They need to engage the community and communicate openly.”

The MEC’s spokesperson Bruce Oom said, “The issues are related to housing. We will definitely look at them. However, the reality is that the Western Cape can only deliver about 12,000 houses per year.”

The province has a housing backlog dating back to 24 years.

The province has recorded the highest number of service delivery protests in 2012.

Eyewitness News: ‘Info bill a threat to the constitution’

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/Story.aspx?Id=76999

‘Info bill a threat to the constitution’

Karabo Tjale

The Right2Know Campaign on Saturday said it would continue to lobby for the complete scrapping of the Protection of Information Bill.

Hundreds of people marched from Botha Park to the Durban City Hall, where they handed over a memorandum to the Ethekwini Municipality.

Right2Know’s China Ngubane said the bill remained a threat to the constitution.

“It will hide all the corruption that is going to happen in government. South African democracy is a hard fought and won democracy and it should prevail,” he said.

The march was in solidarity with the Abahlali Basemjondolo Movement.

The movement called for the resignation of the housing and infrastructure chair Nigel Gumede.

They accused Gumede of failing to meet the needs of the poor in the city.

Abahlali Basemjondolo’s Bandile Mdlalose said, “We don’t want things to be hidden from us. We also demand electricity, water and sanitation. We want Nigel Gumede to go so that we can have access to housing.”

(Edited by Lindiwe Mlandu)

Eyewitness News: Civic action group threatens protests over evictions

Madikizela is conveniently ignoring the fact that while a land occupation is illegal it is a minor civil offence (trespass) while his own actions, when he authorizes evictions without a court order, are a criminal offence.

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/articleprog.aspx?id=63401

Civic action group threatens protests over evictions
Malungelo Booi

Civic action group Abahlali baseMjondolo on Thursday warned of rolling protests if government does not stop evictions and demolitions in the Western Cape.

The group says it wrote to Human Settlement MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela on Wednesday.

The organisation wants him to sign an undertaking within seven days that no structures will be destroyed, even if erected illegally on government land.

However, the MEC is not budging.

Abahlali baseMjondolo claims a number of people in the province are homeless because of demolitions and it intends ending them once and for all.

The organisation’s provincial chairperson Mzonke Bunu said the MEC has no choice but to agree.

“We will make sure that we do protest in front of his office every day so that he must resign,” he said.

However, Madikizela said he will not be bullied.

“For people to write a letter to me to say that I must condone illegal activities its crazy,” he said.

He warned they will continue dismantling illegally erected structures.

(Edited by Lindiwe Mlandu)

Eyewitness News: More than 200 left destitute by CT shack fire

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/articleprog.aspx?id=54608

More than 200 left destitute by CT shack fire
Malungelo Booi

Residents from QQ Section in Khayelitsha, one of the biggest townships in Cape Town will spend the afternoon re-building their shacks following a devastating fire on Tuesday night.

More than 200 people have been left homeless by the blaze.

Disaster management officials have began distributing building material to several residents who have been left homeless due to the blaze. Each family will receive five corrugated iron sheets to re-erect their structures.

Most residents who spoke to Eyewitness News said they lost everything including their identity documents. It is understood an illegal electricity connection started the fire. Locals said a dog locked inside one of the shacks was burnt to death.

(Edited by Lindiwe Mlandu)

Eyewitness News: W Cape government alarmed by townships’ growth

http://www.eyewitnessnews.co.za/articleprog.aspx?id=45064

W Cape government alarmed by townships’ growth
Regan Thaw

Some NGO’s and the Western Cape government have expressed concern over the rate at which some informal settlements are expanding.

The group Abahlali Basemjondolo said the steady growth in townships is fuelling the struggle for service delivery.

Some squatter camps are growing by ten percent every year.

Meanwhile, the provincial Human Settlements Department has admitted it is struggling to meet the rising demand for formal homes.

Residents of Zwelitsha Enkaznini informal settlement in Khayelitsha told Eyewitness News they notice new shacks almost weekly.

With more people moving into the area the struggle for already scarce services intensifies.

People are forced to queue for water as there are reportedly only five working taps in the township.

Housing activist, Mthobeli Qona showed Eyewitness News a dumping ground of sorts which is also used as impromptu toilet facilities.

But some have become entrepreneurs, selling corrugated iron to shack dwellers. Other homeowners bordering the settlement charge people to use their toilets.

A MORE ’INNOVATIVE APPROACH’ NEEDED?

A Cape Town academic has suggested Western Cape authorities need to become more innovative in their response to the province’s housing shortage.

Social anthropologist at the University of Cape Town, Fiona Ross, said various factors cause people to move to squatter camps.

“So they had lived on a farm and as those farms mechanised or as they sold up for urban development those people were displaced and had come to the city. There is a great influx…”

(Edited by Aletta Gardner)