Category Archives: Matthew Savides

Mercury: Durban shuts door on housing applicants

http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=124&art_id=vn20080411055042956C987684

The Mercury 11/4/2008

Durban shuts door on housing applicants

Applications for soon-to-be-built council houses in Westville will not be rescheduled, despite Wednesday’s application process being cancelled when thousands of people stormed the makeshift council office.

Pandemonium broke out when people jumped the queue and forced their way into Turo Hall. Some were seen jumping over the fence and others cut through the fence with pliers. Minor injuries were reported.

The application process was cancelled, resulting in some people, who had queued from early Tuesday, not handing in their applications.

People were applying for houses at one of four low-to-middle income housing developments in Durban.

The houses, in Westville, KwaMashu, Newlands and Chatsworth, are valued from R180 000 to R750 000 and are aimed at people earning from R2 500 to R15 000 a month.

About 24 000 people queued at the four locations from long before applications opened at 9am on Wednesday.

Officials had planned for the Westville applications to take place at the civic centre, but it was found that the centre was double-booked and the process was moved to nearby Turo Hall.

Tempers flared as people forced their way to the front of the queue, and chaos ensued as people jumped over the fence to access the hall.

Some got in and obtained application documents, which they distributed to people outside the hall premises, further fuelling tensions.

Applications at Chatsworth were abandoned an hour early as people rushed to get to the front of the queue at the Montford Community Hall. Officials said the people who had caused the trouble at Westville had moved to Chatsworth once the Westville offices had closed.

Applications at the other two sites had proceeded without incident.

There was talk on Wednesday that the Westville applications would be re-advertised, but municipal housing department head Couglan Pather said on Thursday that enough applications, about 300, had been received at Westville and the other three locations.

“I am in the process of compiling a report on the application process. I will recommend that applications are not reopened, as we received enough applications. However, the council will make the final decision,” he said.

The DA, which blamed the council for the chaos at Westville, reacted with outrage to Pather’s statement.

Caucus leader John Steenhuisen said the decision, if taken, would be “extremely unfair” towards those who had followed instructions and had not disrupted proceedings.

“The chaos was a direct result of the council’s inability to plan properly and work through the logistics,” he said.

Referring to similar scenes in Newlands, when the first round of applications was cancelled on March 1, Steenhuisen said it was “appalling” that the council had not anticipated Wednesday’s events.

“It is not like the council did not know something like this could and would happen. Instead of remedying the situation and starting again, they abandoned it. Now they should start over,” he said.

The housing developments were thrust into the spotlight when the municipality said it would employ racial quotas in distributing the houses.

In areas dominated by one race group, other races would be allocated a high percentage of the houses. Opposition parties compared this with the “social engineering” applied by the apartheid government.

While the ANC said implementing the quotas would ensure that communities were not racially divided, it was clear on Wednesday that the demographics of the applications were not the same as the municipality’s racial targets.

While Pather admitted that the demographics in KwaMashu were “not as good as expected”, he said the racial mix was “quite good” at Newlands and Chatsworth. It was impossible to establish the mix at Westville because of the chaos there.

matthew.savides@inl.co.za

* This article was originally published on page 4 of The Mercury on April 11, 2008

Shack dwellers ignore police warning

This article was originally published on page 2 of The Mercury on April 11, 2007

Shack dwellers ignore police warning

April 11 2007 at 12:56PM

By Proffesor Ndawonde & Matthew Savides

After lengthy discussions between Sydenham Police and members of shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo, a proposed march from the Kennedy Road informal settlement to the police station on Tuesday night was halted as police declared the protest illegal.

However, 14 members of the movement, including its leader, S’bu Zikode, walked to the station to hand over a memorandum to Superintendent Glen Nayager, who they claim has been harassing the community.

According to the Public Gatherings Act, a group of 14 or fewer can march without prior permission.

About 80 members of the movement met at Kennedy Road Community Hall in solidarity with five of their members who are being held at Westville Prison in connection with the death of Mzwakhe Sithole, who was caught by community members after having allegedly robbed one of the settlement’s residents.

Police say the five are part of a group that assaulted Sithole before handing him over to police.

He later died in custody.

However, the group say it is the police who should take responsibility for his death.

The five are into the tenth day of a hunger strike, which started in protest at what they call their unfair arrest and harassment by police.

Zikode said they were determined to continue the strike until their formal bail application on Friday.

The memorandum accuses the police of racism, having no respect for the residents’ homes, making poverty a crime, criminalising the poor, protecting and working with criminals, working with people who have “declared themselves enemies of the shack dwellers”, ignoring crimes against shack dwellers and refusing the community permission to open cases against the local police.

Nayager would not comment on the hunger strike and denied accusations that the arrests were politically motivated and aimed at Abahlali baseMjondolo members.

proffesor.ndawonde@inl.co.za

matthew.savides@inl.co.za

Raging storm leaves Durban in the dark

Available from http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=139&art_id=vn20070212075433398C433346

February 12 2007 at 10:39AM

By

More than 15 Durban suburbs were without power on Sunday night after a violent electrical storm on Saturday night also caused flooding and damage to streets and homes in the city.

According to the South African Weather Service’s Durban office, the storm is likely to have originated in the Drakensberg and moved towards the ocean, hitting Pietermaritzburg and Richmond before reaching Durban.

However, despite its origins in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands, more rain fell in Durban (22,5mm) than in Pietermaritzburg (15,6mm).

‘There was a marked increase in the number of fender-bender accidents’
Sunday night, 17 suburbs were still without power, with most of the blackouts being blamed on the storm.

Among them were Emolweni, KwaDabeka, Waterfall, Kloof, Botha’s Hill, Kwa-Nyuswa, Wyebank, Reservoir Hills, Mayville/Sherwood, Cottonlands, Inanda, River View, Umhlanga, Bluff, Umbumbulu and Adam’s Mission.

The power cuts came after a string of blackouts in Durban last week, a week which saw at least one area without power each day.

A power failure also hit Sahara Stadium Kingsmead on Wednesday night, plunging the one-day international cricket match between South Africa and Pakistan into darkness for about an hour.

Umbilo residents were without power for more than 50 hours from last Monday night until electricity returned on Thursday.

Other areas affected included the city centre, Durban North, Umgeni Heights, Springfield Park, Morningside, Overport and Inanda.

These blackouts were not weather-related.

Emergency services officials said the weekend storm had caused flooding on major traffic routes, disruptions to traffic lights at major intersections and flooding at informal settlements in Durban.

ER24 Operations Manager Neil Noble said there had been flooding on the north-bound carriageway of the M4 freeway, both carriageways of the N3, Edwin Swales VC Drive and the N2 at Amanzimtoti.

As a result, several minor collisions had been reported.

“ER24 paramedics and ambulances raced all over the greater Durban metropolitan area for a large number of accidents, caused mainly by vehicles aquaplaning when they hit large puddles of water at speed, and slamming into the back of slower moving vehicles when they were unable to stop in time.

“There was a marked increase in the number of fender-bender accidents,” Noble said.

S’bu Zikode, Chairperson of the shack-dwellers’ movement Abahlali Basemjondolo, said the Kennedy Road and Foreman Road informal settlements at Clare Estate had been “badly affected” by the storm.

“Residents did not sleep (on Saturday night) after their dwellings were flooded by the rain.

“Water burst in from beneath and flooded people’s homes, damaging a lot of furniture and belongings.

“Luckily there were no homes that were washed away by the floods.

“Residents are drying out their belongings and salvaging what they can,” Zikode said.

Weather Service forecaster S’fiso Ngubane said: “The thunderstorms Durban is experiencing are normal summer rains.

“The weather will clear up and get hotter from Tuesday,” he added.

Shack dwellers held after clash with police

Available at http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=124&art_id=vn20060913022753313C342130

September 13 2006 at 10:28AM

Two leaders of the shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo, were arrested and charged with resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer on Tuesday.

The organisation called the charges “crazy” and claimed that Sbu Zikode and Philani Zungu, the president and deputy president respectively, had been assaulted by police.

As tension over their arrests escalated, gunfire was exchanged between Kennedy Road informal settlement residents and the police.

Sworn at by police
Richard Pithouse, of the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Civil Development, who is closely aligned to Abahlali, said he had heard from witnesses that Zikode and Zungu had been stopped by police at the settlement as they were about to leave for a radio interview.

“They (Zikode and Zungu) were waiting in a car when police came to them and said the car was stolen. They (Zikode and Zungu) showed the car’s (licence) papers. The police assaulted them and pushed them to the ground,” Pithouse claimed, adding that other people, including Zikode’s wife, had been sworn at by police when they asked to see the pair.

“We have had no access to them and it’s outrageous. One of our members crept up to the (cell) bars and saw them lying on the floor. We haven’t been allowed to get a doctor to see them so we don’t know how badly they have been hurt.”

Police Captain Myentheran Lazarus said police had used “necessary force” to arrest the men, who had been approached on a routine search. “Our Crime Prevention Unit was on a routine patrol when we came across two or three Abahlali members. When the officers attempted to search them, they became violent and assaulted two officers. We used the necessary force to arrest them.”

Lazarus said eight shots had been fired at police during a march to the police station by residents. The police fired rubber bullets.

matthew.savides@inl.co.za