Category Archives: Nomzamo Mkhize

Update from Umlazi: Zwelethu Train Station Shut Down & Protest at the Police Station

18 July 2012
Combined UPM & AbM Press Statement

Update from Umlazi: Zwelethu Train Station Shut Down & Protest at the Police Station

At around 4:00 a.m. yesterday morning activists involved in the Umlazi Occupation and the ward 88 struggle closed down the Zwelethu Train Station. This action was in protest at the failure of the police to arrest the ward councillor, Nomzamo Mkhize, after she and her son assaulted an activist.

There was a stand-off between activists and the police at the train station following which the general secretary of the BEC of the local ANC branch, Sandile, tried to arrange an urgent meeting with Nigel Gumede. A meeting with Gumede has always been one of the demands of the Umlazi Occupation.

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Assault & Intimidation of Action by Umlazi Councillor

16 July 2012
Combined UPM & AbM Press Statement

ASSAULT AND INTIMIDATION OF ACTION BY UMLAZI COUNCILLOR

Yesterday at around 14:00 pm there was a mass gathering of the continuous occupation that is happening in the People's Office that has been set up next to the Councillor's Office, in Ward 88, Umlazi.

A report was given on how the struggle of Umlazi started and how it got the attention of the Branch Executive Committee (BEC) which had come with lot of promises like getting what the community have demanded from them which was a meeting with Nigel Gumede, the Chairperson of the Housing Portfolio Committee and Infrastructure also Willies Mchunu, the MEC of Safety and Community. The meeting of delivering by the BEC sat on Wednesday (04th of July) unfortunately they delivered nothing that was expected and which they had promised. Neither Gumede or Mchunu attended the meeting and the BEC offered nothing but sweet talk.

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M&G: Umlazi uprising faces bullets, arrests

Note: There is a man in the area, Mr Zungu, that has been interested in contesting the councillor’s position – as is his democratic right. He and his home have been targeted in the repression. However the rebellion in Ward 88 has not been driven by Mr Zungu. It comes from legitimate and popular anger and has been expressed, at the request of the people, through the structures of Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Unemployed People’s Movement with the support of other grassroots organisations like the South Durban Community Environmental Alliance, the Wentworth Development Forum etc.

http://mg.co.za/article/2012-06-28-umlazi-uprising-faces-bullets-arrests

Umlazi uprising faces bullets, arrests

by Fatima Asmal-Motala

Tension is mounting southwest of Durban in Umlazi’s ward 88, where activists say the police are randomly arresting people and firing live ammunition.

Their right to protest has been violated, they say.


Bheki Buthelezi – Picture by Rogan Ward

“We are not free in Umlazi. The police are arresting and shooting people with real bullets.

People are in hospital as we speak,” a 34-year-old woman, who belongs to the ward 88 crisis committee, told the Mail & Guardian.
The woman said she did not want to be named because she feared for her life. “The police here are working with the councillors,” she said.

“We are protesting because we wanted the councillor to step down because she doesn’t deliver. She doesn’t respect us. Even if we call her, she doesn’t come to meet us.”

Bheki Buthelezi of the Unemployed People’s Movement, who is also a member of the ward 88 crisis committee, was one of 19 people arrested last weekend on charges of intimidation or public violence.

“We were going to meet on Saturday afternoon to formalise a programme to occupy the councillor’s office. But on Saturday morning the police arrested me without having a case against me,” he said.

Struck off the roll

“I was later released on R500 bail and told to appear in the magistrate’s court, but there was no magistrate there. I was told my case had been struck off the roll because there was no evidence against me and that the bail would be refunded.”

Buthelezi said service delivery protests in the area dated back to August last year.

“On June 8 we marched, demanding that the councillor, Nomzamo Mkhize, step down because she works with only certain people belonging to her camp. We handed a memorandum over to the manager of the office of the speaker in the eThekwini municipality and we gave it seven days to respond.”

He said that when they did not receive a response, community members gathered again and decided to occupy the councillor’s office.

“There were youth who were pushing to burn tyres on the street, but we said this was not the answer; we needed to find an alternative by formulating our own programme to see our ward being developed.”

Resolution

Buthelezi said the police were called in when the protesters arrived at Mkhize’s office on Wednesday afternoon.

“We then moved back to the ground where we usually meet. We heard that some people wanted to burn her office, but we took a resolution not to do so.

“About 3500 of us gathered to go to protect the office. On our way there we encountered the police, who began to shoot at people randomly. One person was shot in the leg and taken to hospital. Others were shot in their homes.

“We submitted our demands directly to the people who are supposed to respond to us, but they did not do so. They used the police to shoot people and arrest them.”

Buthelezi, who is a member of the Black Consciousness Party (BCP), insisted that the protests were not politically motivated.

“We are doing this as residents, not political parties. There are four political parties in the ward — the ANC, BCP, National Freedom Party and Inkatha Freedom Party — and we have all come together to raise issues of unemployment, housing, the landless and informal settlements.”

Issues of tenders

However, Mkhize disagreed with Buthelezi’s comments.

“I talk to every person in my ward. Some of these protesters are interested in issues of tenders, others are politically motivated,” the councillor said.

“There is service delivery in this area, but there are nominees who did not become councillors, so this is politically motivated.”

She said that she had been forced to ask the police to intervene. “What can I say when they march at night, coming towards my home? I had no choice.”

Mkhize said she would meet the protesters soon. “We will talk to the very same people who are toyi-toying and ask them what the problem is.

“When they marched, they gave their memorandum to the office of the speaker, which, to date, has not passed it on to me, so I don’t know what’s in it.”

DLF: Bheki Buthelezi Appears in Court Today & 18 Other UPM Activists Arrested for Public Violence

Democratic Left Front
25 June 2012

PRESS STATEMENT: BHEKI BUTHELEZI APPEARS IN COURT TODAY & 18 OTHER UPM
ACTIVISTS ARRESTED FOR PUBLIC VIOLENCE

The Democratic Left Front (DLF) calls for solidarity with Bheki Buthelezi
and 18 others, some of whom are members of the Unemployed People’s Movement
(UPM), when they appear at 09h00 at the Umlazi Magistrate’s Court.
Buthelezi will face charges of intimidation. The others were arrested
around 11pm on Saturday evening ostensibly on charges of public violence. Some
of the 18 have been involved in community protests over service delivery
while others have not. Buthelezi was released from police custody on
Saturday evening after sustained community occupation and pressure on the
Umlazi Police Station Commander. Abahlali BaseMijondolo, the South Durban
Community Environment Alliance, the KZN Right To Know Campaign, the
Clairwood Community Forum, the Durban Social Forum and the DLF will all
join the 19 comrades and the local community at the court this morning.

All these charges relate to sustained mass action by the community of
Section S in Umlazi (Ward 88, eThekwini Municipality). This community has
suffered for more than 6 years at the hands of unaccountable ANC councilors
and a local municipality that has failed to deliver services and provide
employment through local economic development. On more than three
occasions, the community has demanded that the municipality must recall
councillor Nomzamo Mkhize as she has not fulfilled her duties including a
failure to call a single ward meeting to discuss community issues. Instead,
she has worked on a factional basis selecting who to meet with in the
community and she has ignored several community calls and requests for
meetings. The municipality has failed to provide electricity, water,
sanitation, housing and paving. The community has also demanded that the
municipality must call a ward general meeting where it must be transparent
about, and allow for bottom-up community participation in the municipal
budget and development plans. The community has also demanded that the old
Airport space be allocated for food sovereignty and housing. The community
has done everything to ensure that these demands are heard. But at every
instance the local municipality has equivocated and responded with
increasing repression. It was at this point that the community decided on
the peaceful occupation of local municipal offices that the police were
activated to arrest Buthelezi first and then the other 18 activists. What
more must the community do to live decently as promised by the South
African Constitution?

The DLF reiterates its call for the dropping of the charges against
Buthelezi and the 18. The police have no evidence against any of them. In
fact, the charges are instigated by repressive intentions given the
sustained mass struggles in the community. The DLF calls on the South
African Human Rights Commission to investigate the police violations of the
rights to protest by using the arrest of community activists.

ENDS

FOR COMMENTS, CONTACT:

Bheki Buthelezi (UPM & DLF) – 072 639 9893

Mazibuko K. Jara (DLF) – 083 651 0271

Athish Kirun (DLF) – 078 257 3764

Ayanda Kota (UPM & DLF) – 078 625 6462

Mnikelo Ndabankulu (AbM) – 081 309 5485

China Ngubane (DLF & Right to Know Campaign) – 072 651 9790

Charges Against Bheki Buthelezi Withdrawn & the Zakheleni 18 Released

25 June 2012
Abahlali baseMjondolo & Unemployed People's Movement Press Statement

Charges Against Bheki Buthelezi Withdrawn & the Zakheleni 18 Released

Today all charges against Bheki Buthelezi were dropped and the Zakheleni 18 were released on free bail at the Umlazi Magistrate's Court. It is clear that the arrest of the 18 was politically engineered. The arrestees clearly stated in court that they don’t know the reason why they were arrested. As the magistrate asked them why they were arrested they said they had no idea and that they were just having drinks with friends on a Saturday evening when the police simply came and arrested them. The 18 were released on free bail with the understanding that the police have no evidence against any of the accused, that they were not involved in any violence and they are all poor and unemployed.

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