Category Archives: Fish Hoek

Shack fire leaves 6 000 people homeless in Masiphumelele, Fish Hoek

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/05/03/cape-fire-wreaks-havoc

Cape fire wreaks havoc
03-May-2011 | Elvis Nyelenzi

ABOUT 6,000 residents of Cape Town were left homeless when a fire swept through their informal settlement on Sunday night destroying shacks

The residents of Masiphumelele, near Fish Hoek, said it was one of the worst fires they had ever experienced.

One person was burnt beyond recognition, while another sustained serious burns.

Community leader Mpilikhaya Nyumbana told Sowetan that half the shacks and houses in the area had been wiped out by the eight-hour blaze.

“The fire started at 11pm on Sunday night. Nobody knows how it started because it started at the back of a wetland in those bushes,” Nyumbana said.

“It is so wet there that we can’t understand how a fire started.”

He said 30 fire engines had tried to put out the blaze, but did not succeed.

“It blazed until 7am today (Monday). We found one dead person underneath a shack and we don’t know who it is.

“Nobody can tell if it was a man or a woman,” a distressed Nyumbana said.

ANC provincial chairperson Songezo Mjongile slammed the DA over the fire, saying because Masiphumelele did not have an internal road the fire engines had been unable to drive between the shacks and stop the fire.

“This is a catastrophe. It looks like Kosovo here. The worst part is that at 2am the fire had not yet reached the shacks and it could have been put out if there was a road for the fire engines to pass,” Mjongile said.

Social development MEC Patricia de Lille agreed that the fire spread because the fire engines could not get into the densely populated area, but accused the ANC of playing politics.

She said at a public meeting yesterday that the city would help the residents rebuild their shacks and allow for fire breaks in between the houses.

Mother of three children, Nomveliso Mziba, had been given four wooden poles and four pieces of zinc by her friends and had started rebuilding her shack early yesterday morning.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/homeless-fire-victims-refuse-to-move-1.1063463

Homeless fire victims refuse to move

May 3 2011 at 10:00am
By Sandiso Phaliso

Residents whose shacks were burnt to the ground in Masiphumelele on Monday refused to move to alternative land while the City of Cape Town levelled the area before they rebuilt their shacks.

The City asked residents to wait before rebuilding their shacks so the informal settlement could have some sort of street system to enable emergency services to move freely in case of another fire.

Emergency services could not get to the fire because of the density of the informal settlement.

After inspecting the fire, Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato told a gathering of local community leaders that only 600 shacks could be accommodated in the area and that alternative land would be provided to others.

This sparked anger among some residents, who wanted to know what criteria would be used to identify the 600.

The residents wanted Plato to order that those who were not among the 600 be allowed to place their shacks on an open space adjacent to where the fire occurred.

“We will discuss that later,” Plato said but residents said they wanted answers immediately.

Akhona Mangaliso, 42, said the “people are refusing to stop rebuilding their shacks unless Mayor Plato gives them surety that they have a right to use the open land”.

Mangaliso said people were afraid the city might destroy their shacks if there was no written land-usage agreement.

Resident Nobesuthu Mntuyedwa, 45, who lost everything in the fire, said she hoped to be part of the first 600.

“The other land would take longer because we have to wait for the government to approve it first. If I wait, where would my children stay?

City risk disaster management spokesman Wilfred Solomons-Johannes said: “Despite the request by the city to clear and level the site before construction commences, the community proceeded with the erection of structures.

”This has hampered the recovery operations and the layout for emergency vehicular access routes within the informal settlement following the fire.” – Cape Times

Sowetan: No joy despite food parcels

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/01/05/no-joy-despite-food-parcels

Jan 5, 2011 | Michael Nkalane

“HOW can you only give food to someone who does not have a place to sleep? We will eat, then what follows after? I do not understand how our government thinks. Our government is stupid,” said Luyanda Lekwe of Masiphumelele in Fish Hoek.

He was expressing his concern yesterday during a visit by Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies where 166 shacks were gutted by fire on Sunday, leaving 500 families destitute.

The disgruntled Lekwe said instead of giving food parcels the government should have a corrugated iron factory in place ready for such disasters.

“I understand that they don’t live in these appalling conditions,” he said.

Re-erecting his gutted shack with damaged material, Luyanda Mbane said the only way to avoid fires, which occurred frequently, was to install electricity.

“As long as we do not have electricity in shacks we will continue to endure such fires,” he said.

Handing over food parcels the minister told residents that government was offering its solidarity. He cautioned them against using flammable materials.

“From now we will pay attention to the safety of shacks. We will prevent these fires from happening by making sure that paraffin stoves sold to people meet safety requirements,” he promised.

He said residents would be built decent houses. According to residents, the fire was caused by an unattended stove.

Zwelethu Stata, who arrived yesterday from Eastern Cape, said he was greeted by an empty space where his shack used to be.

“I lost belongings such as wall units, a washing machine, sofas and my bed,” he said.

When Sowetan spoke to him he was re-erecting his shack.

“But my concern is that I am short of material. We are a family of six here.

They are still in Eastern Cape and I do not know how I am going to break the news to them,” he said.

Neliswa Madubula said at least her family of six would have something to cook.

She said she had managed to save only her suitcase.

“I lost everything. I will never forget that Sunday.”