Category Archives: Madlala Village

Concourt slams “unacceptable” evictions

http://www.seri-sa.org/index.php/38-latest-news/253-zulu-concourt-slams

 

Concourt slams “unacceptable” evictions

On 6 June 2014, the Constitutional Court handed down judgment in Zulu and 389 Others v eThekwini Municipality and Others (Zulu). SERI represents Abahlali baseMjondolo (Abahlali) who acted as amicus curiae in the case. The case concerned the interpretation of a court order obtained by the KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Human Settlements and Public Works on 28 March 2013 from the Durban High Court. The order permits the Durban municipality to “prevent any persons from invading and/or occupying and/or undertaking the construction of any structures” on specified land within the municipality’s area of jurisdiction and to “remove any materials placed by any persons upon” that land. The order was used to justify the Cato Crest evictions in 2013.

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Business Day: Shack dwellers want removal order set aside

http://www.bdlive.co.za/national/2014/02/14/shack-dwellers-want-removal-order-set-aside

by Ernest Mabuza

RESIDENTS of a Durban informal settlement on Wednesday asked the Constitutional Court to set aside a high court order for fear it was being misused by the local municipality to unlawfully remove residents.

The order, granted in the Durban High Court in March last year, empowered the eThekwini municipality and police to take all reasonable steps to prevent any person invading, occupying and undertaking the construction of any structures on 37 properties belonging to the municipality.

Granted by Judge Piet Koen, it gave the municipality power to prevent land invasions and ensures that it does not need to approach the court to seek evictions case by case, as required by the constitution.

Residents of Madlala Village, an informal settlement in Lamontville, near Durban, had in May been refused leave by another high court judge, Gregory Kruger, to intervene to resist confirmation of the interim order.

This week, the residents asked the Constitutional Court to set aside the order because they feared it was being misused by the municipality.

Thandi Norman SC, for the municipality, said the order of Judge Koen was to prevent land invasions. She said the residents were not land invaders and the order did not apply to them.

Vinay Gajoo SC, for the minister of police and the KwaZulu-Natal MEC for human settlements, said land occupations were unacceptable.

But Acting Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke said that courts could not tolerate a society where police could evict people without a court order.

Stuart Wilson, for Abahlali Basemjondolo, an association of shack dwellers, said Judge Koen’s order was an eviction order that authorised evictions without court supervision. He asked that it be set aside in entirety.

The court reserved judgment.

Daily News: Shack dwellers head for ConCourt

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/shack-dwellers-head-for-concourt-1.1646675#.Uv3qf2KSx1U

Nosipho Mngoma

Durban – Durban shack dwellers who have been evicted and whose homes have been demolished more than 20 times have taken their fight to the highest court in the land.

Residents of Madlala Village in Lamontville, joined by shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo as friends of the court, made representations before the Constitutional Court yesterday to have a Durban High Court order preventing invasion and/or occupation on 9.5km of land around Durban declared unconstitutional.

Their arguments, made by their representatives from the Legal Resource Centre and Socio-Economic Rights Institute of SA (Seri), were based on section 26 (3) of the Bill of Rights. It states: “No one may be evicted from their home, or have their home demolished, without an order of court made after considering all the relevant circumstances. No legislation may permit arbitrary evictions.”

In March the Durban High Court granted the KZN MEC for Human Settlements and Public Works, Ravi Pillay, a provisional order authorising the eThekwini Municipality and the Minister of Police, Nathi Mthethwa, to take all reasonable steps to “prevent persons from invading, occupying and or erecting structures on certain land, remove any materials placed by any person on the land and dismantle or demolish any structures that may be constructed on the property”.

The dwellers claim the order was used to remove them from Madlala Village and was also used to remove residents from Cato Crest. These were backyard shack dwellers who had previously lived in the backyards of main shack residents.

When the main dwellings were demarcated for housing, the backyard shack dwellers were not allocated housing and took up residence on a nearby piece of land owned by the department.

They were evicted from this land by the Municipal Land Invasion Control Unit in the presence of police.

When it came time for the provisional order to be confirmed, the Madlala Village residents launched an application to oppose, represented by the Legal Resource Centre.

They claimed that the order effectively granted blanket permission to evict people and for their property to be demolished without a court order or taking the specific circumstances into consideration.

This was dismissed by the high court, on the grounds that the order was aimed at preventing land invasions. The order was confirmed.

After a failed application for leave to appeal against this High Court decision, the residents approached the Supreme Court of Appeal, which also dismissed their application. Abahlali baseMjondolo joined the Constitutional Court bid as friends of the court.

Acting for Abahlali, Seri’s Tashwill Esterhuizen said the MEC was using the order to give effect to unlawful evictions and gave police and the unit “unfettered discretion”.

“That is a violation of the rule of law. It’s unconstitutional.”

Esterhuizen said they also argued before the Constitutional Court that the order “was granted against the whole world” as it was not directed against a specific respondent.

The opposition to the application, by the city, MEC and minister, was based on their averment that no relief was sought or granted against the Madlala Village residents since the purpose of the order was to prevent land invasions from the date it was granted.

They also argue that section 26 (3) may be limited where persons invade land illegally in order to coerce the State into providing housing for them on a preferential basis.

Judgment was reserved.

 

Evictions in Madlala Village the Day after they were in the Constitutional Court

13 February 2014

Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Statement

 

Evictions in Madlala Village the Day after they were in the Constitutional Court

Yesterday we went to the Constitutional Court to support the Madlala Village community in Lamontville. We were there to oppose an unjust and unlawful eviction order which was granted to the MEC for Human Settlements Ravi Pillay and which the eThekwini Municipality was misusing to claim that it could evict anyone, anywhere despite the protections given to shack dwellers by the Constitution and the PIE Act.

It was very sad for us to hear the lawyers for the MEC telling the court that the order is not to evict residents but to stop new land occupations. The reality is that outside the court they are continuing to evict and are misusing this order to claim that their evictions are lawful.

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Abahlali baseMjondolo Return to the Constitutional Court Tomorrow

Tuesday11 February, 2014

Abahlali baseMjondolo press statement

 

Abahlali baseMjondolo Return to the Constitutional Court Tomorrow

The Marikana Land Occupation in Cato Crest was founded after an illegal eviction by the eThekwini Municipality. It has been destroyed over and over again by the eThekwini Municipality since March last year. Each time the occupation has been rebuilt. We have been to court and won urgent interdicts against the city preventing them from illegally destroying the occupation. We have marched on the City Hall in our thousands. When we did not receive a reply to our memorandum we organized simultaneous road blockades across the city. Now we are taking this struggle to the Constitutional Court.

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Attachments


STATEMENT OF NYATHI - OCTOBER 2013