Category Archives: newspaper_story

Cape Times: Judge orders metro to buy land for squatters

http://www.capetimes.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4259562

Judge orders metro to buy land for squatters
Cape Times
February 18, 2008 Edition 1

Anna Louw

JOHANNESBURG: In a landmark judgment, a high court judge has ruled in favour of a group of landless people living in an informal settlement near Buhle Park, Germiston.

The court ordered the Ekurhuleni Metro to buy the land that the people had occupied illegally for the past seven years and to provide them with basic services – immediately.

On Friday, Acting Justice Nazeer Cassim said the owner of the land – part of the farm Rooikop – had waited nearly four years for the law to come to his assistance, but it had failed him.

He said of the squatters, “Their plight is desperate. They have been waiting since the new democracy in 1994 for this government to come to their assistance. And the government in this case is represented by the local authority.”

The judge added that the metro had done nothing about the plight of these desperate people and that, in his view, “a court of law must interfere in appropriate cases where an organ of the state was consistently failing in its functions and obligations concerning the plight of the poor”.

The court heard that 76 households had illegally occupied the land since 2001. The number of households has grown to 214.

The property is available for purchase by the municipality for R250 000, which the judge said was a modest sum.

Sunday Tribune: Poor in hell while elite buys heaven

http://www.sundaytribune.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4236310

OpEd
Poor in hell while elite buys heaven
Sunday Tribune

February 03, 2008 Edition 1

Imraan Buccus

National attention remains fixed on the unlovely aftermath of Polokwane and the electricity debacle. At times like this we often forget the ordinary people who keep the country going, and in whose name most of the major battles continue to be fought.

The old Swahili proverb about the grass suffering when the elephants fight has become something of a cliché, but certain things do bear repeating.

This week Isolezwe newspaper reported that a baby had been killed by a rat in the Kennedy Road settlement in suburban Durban.

This vision of hell is difficult to reconcile with our city fathers’ constant focus on casinos, theme parks and stadiums. The old story that these elite projects will drive economic growth that will uplift the poor cuts no ice.

There is nowhere in the world where elite projects have done much more than enrich the people who get the contracts to build and manage them.

Every time I hear someone talk about how a stadium or theme park will save us, I can’t help thinking about Ngugi wa Thiongo’s brilliant novel Wizard of the Crow.

In this novel, a paranoid dictator throws all his country’s meagre resources into constructing the tallest building in the world, which he calls “Marching Heaven”.

Of course as resources flow into the concrete instantiation of his manic ego, they are sucked out of the hands of ordinary people, leading only to a phallic excess of bad taste amid profound misery.

I’m not the only one to have a nagging suspicion that many among the new elite that is pushing out Mbeki’s allies after Polokwane are after little more than their own piece of the “Marching Heaven” action.

Given the profound nature of our social crisis, our politics should be about putting the people, real ordinary people, at the centre of public life.

But there are scant signs of our own Evo Morales emerging from the new order. There are, for that matter, scant signs that a number of credible civil society leaders are due for the respect they richly deserve.

It seems the government is set to continue to plough ahead with its tendency to plan and implement its own projects, rather than to engage in a real partnership with its people.

We have two major disasters to caution us against top-down policy making.

The first, of course, is Khutsong. The second is the housing crisis in Cape Town. The government decided that people in the Joe Slovo settlement should be moved away from the freeway before 2010. They decided to move people to Delft, which is 30km away.

But the 6 000 residents of Joe Slovo have refused to accept forced removal on the grounds that they were promised houses where they live and that they needed to be in the city to access work and schools etc.

At the same time the residents of Delft, living in terribly overcrowded conditions, have simply seized the houses to which the government intended to move the Joe Slovo residents. The houses had been promised to them initially and they desperately need housing in their community.

Meanwhile the government has promised the land on which the Joe Slovo settlement sits to a developer who, in turn, has raised capital for it from the banks.

This is a disaster that could have been avoided if solutions were negotiated directly with communities, rather than imposed on them from above.

Without exception, every instance of genuinely successful public housing provision is based on democratic planning partnerships between governments and community organisations.

Two of the most famous examples are Naga City in the Philippines and Curitiba in Brazil.

In Durban we risk our own disaster. The stand-off between shack dwellers and the city that was rumoured to be heading towards resolution in December last year seems to have reverted to open conflict.

As The Mercury reported last week, Abahlali baseMjondolo took the city to court to stop illegal evictions once again, and once again they won a court interdict.

It seems clear that shack dwellers in Durban are just as unlikely to accept forced removals to places like Park Gate that are as far out of this city as Delft is in Cape Town.

But there are no signs that the city is willing to break from its top-down planning model. The partnership model seems to be reserved for our own “Marching Heaven” projects.

But while up to a third of the city’s population lives in a hell where children are eaten by rats and burnt in fires, it’s unlikely that the poor will care which elite is marching to which heaven.

Poverty is a crisis. It must be addressed as urgently as any other humanitarian emergency. But it also has to be addressed on the basis of respect and partnership.

Without that partnership, even the best-intentioned projects can do more harm than good. The simple fact of the matter is that governments need to work with people, not for people.

Nothing else has ever worked. Top-down planning, whether undertaken by the World Bank or socialist governments, has never produced a decent society.

If the commitment coming out of Polokwane was about genuine people’s participation in decision-making rather than a circulation of elites, I’d be resting a lot easier.

As it is, these are not easy times.

Sowetan: Summit discusses abuse of farm dwellers

Summit discusses abuse of farm dwellers

Sne Masuku, Sowetan, 7 December 2007

Emotions ran high when community-based organisations met the ministry of land affairs at a two-day Land Agrarian indaba aimed at addressing problems of farm dwellers in Zululand.

The abuse of farm dwellers was high on the agenda. Land Affairs Minister Lulu Xingwana and KwaZulu-Natal MEC for agriculture and environmental affairs Mtholephi Mthimkhulu attended the summit that ends today.

Xingwana said she hoped the summit would find ways of resolving the issues of abuse against farm dwellers.

She said people in the Zululand district live on private land and their lives become hard when they come into conflict with landowners.

“This situation has resulted in criminal cases and even loss of life. These are the problems that we will discuss.”

Farm dwellers representatives called for the establishment of a special court to deal with their cases.

The Landless People’s Movement (LPM) complained of the challenges they faced particularly with the way the current courts were structured.

The LPM said in some areas, especially in rural towns, the prosecutor or magistrate was related to the farmer.

LPM spokesman Msizeni Magwaza said people living on the farms were victimised when they reported cases of abuse.

In most instances the cases don’t make it to court and those that rarely do are thrown out.

“We are calling for special courts that would deal specially with cases laid by farm dwellers.

“The court would ensure that the farmers and farm dwellers were treated equally.”

Magwaza said farm workers were assaulted, evicted and their safety on farms compromised.

“Farmers have the power to do whatever they wish on their land.

“Children have to walk long distances to school as farmers have fenced off all through roads.”

Maria Mabaso of Farm Eviction and Development Committee urged X ingwana to make sure that the resolutions adopted at the summit were taken seriously and implemented.

“People here are being abused, denied the right to bury their dead, and are evicted. We call on the minister to expropriate land from those farmers who are involved in this, so that the people of Zululand can live in peace and harmony.”

Mercury: Residents lash out over demolition

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4158137

Residents lash out over demolition

December 04, 2007 Edition 1

PROFfESOR NDAWONDE

More than 50 children and 20 women were left homeless when their shacks at an informal settlement in Reservoir Hills were destroyed last week, apparently by the eThekwini Municipality’s Housing Department.

Hundreds of Abahlali base Mjondolo (shack dwellers’ movement) members were affected by the action.

Thabisile Ndlovu, 33, a mother of three children, including a 2-year-old, was among those left without a roof over her head.

“We are sleeping at my friend’s house and there is not enough space for all of us. It a pity because we voted for this democracy, but we are being oppressed by our own leaders,” she said.

Nokubonga Gqiba, a mother of two young girls, said her shelter was demolished with their belongings and food inside.

“We are stranded and my children do not have space to live or sleep. I am angry because the municipality is incompetent and selfish,” she said.

The Chairman of the Shannon Drive Informal Settlement Committee, Thomas Madiba, said a municipal official previously told residents of the settlement to pay R100 each if they wanted houses.

“People paid that money, but there was no answer. Instead, they demolished our homes.

“We told the managers in the municipality about the official but were told that he no longer worked for the municipality.

“Instead of giving us options, they told us they would demolish our houses” he said.

The chairman of the housing and infrastructure committee in the municipality, Sbu Gumede, doubted that Abahlali had not been notified that the shacks would be demolished.

He said the allegations against the former official would be investigated.

“We are going to investigate the matter,” he said, adding that it was unfortunate that there were children who had nowhere to sleep.

Gumede said he would meet the informal settlement committee and the area councillor to discuss the problems the settlement residents faced.

proffesor.ndawonde@inl.co.za

Isolezwe: Basale dengwane bedilizelwa imijondolo

http://www.isolezwe.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4157969

Basale dengwane bedilizelwa imijondolo

December 04, 2007 Edition 1

PROFFESOR NDAWONDE

Izimvula ezihambisana namakhaza kanye nelanga elikhipha umkhovu etsheni kuphelela ezinganeni ezingaphezulu kwezingu-50 kanye nonina bazo njengoba imijondolo abahlala kuyo eReservoir Hills idilizwe yonke nguMasipala weTheku.

Iningi lemindeni esale dengwane ngenxa yalesi simo yileyo engamalungu enhlangano eyaziwa ngokuthi Abahlali baseMjondolo.

UNksz Thabsile Ndlovu (33) ongunina wezingane ezintathu okukhona kuyo eneminyaka emibili ungomunye wabantu abangase bawudlele esigangeni uKhisimusi njengoba abamele uMasipala beshaya phansi bethi ababafuni kule ndawo.

Usihlalo wenhlangano yabantu abahlala kule mijondolo, uMnuz Thomas Madiba, uthe kunabasebenzi bakamasipala ababethembisa abantu abahlala kule ndawo ukuthi uma bekhokha u-R100 bazoyithola indawo kodwa namanje abakaze bathole mpendulo.

USihlalo wekomidi lezezindlu kumasipala waseThekwini uMnuz Sbu Gumede uthe akakholwa wukuthi laba bantu bebengazi ukuthi imijondolo yabo izodilizwa.