Category Archives: Nyanga

Sowetan: Fire leaves Nyanga families homeless

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2010/12/07/fire-leaves-nyanga-families-homeless

Fire leaves Nyanga families homeless

Dec 7, 2010 | Unathi Obose |

MORE than 20 Cape Town families were left homeless on Sunday night, after a fire swept through the Lusaka informal settlement in Nyanga.

Nobody was injured but the 22 families, who share 11 shacks in the area, lost all their possessions. A shipping container was also burnt to the ground.

The cause of the fire is still a mystery. But victims said it started in a locked shack and they suspected a gas stove caused the fire.

Saddened fire victims said they didn’t know what to do without their belongings.

“I received a call at 7pm while I was at work informing me that my shack had burnt down. I lost everything, including my baby’s clothes.

“I am left with only the clothes I am wearing now,” said Nosipho Vutuza, the mother of a 4-year-child.

Monde Madladla was asleep when the fire started.

“I saw smoke coming from my shack. I jumped up and ran out with a TV stand, chair and bed.

“All my other belongings got burnt because the fire engulfed my house very quickly,” Madladla said

Shoemaker Amandla Mnyaka, owner of the shipping container, said he was anxious about his customers’ shoes.

“I don’t know how I am going to pay them back, but I will tell them what happened. I lost everything. My machines were burnt and I will have to buy another container,” he said.

South African National Civic Organisation area committee member Lulamile Ngcane said the residents had asked ANC ward councillor Gladstone Ntamo for help.

But when contacted, Ntamo said he knew nothing about the fire.

“I am in a caucus meeting in Cape Town now and I have not received a report.”

The city’s public awareness manager , Charlotte Powell, said the housing department had provided the victims with starter kits to rebuild their dwellings.

She said the Mustadafin Foundation had taken hot meals, blankets, food parcels and clothing to victims.

West Cape News: Cape Town set for month of protests

http://westcapenews.com/?p=2296

Cape Town set for month of protests

Damage to street lights as result of ongoing service delivery protests has caused havoc with traffice and is costing the city hundreds of thousands of rand in repairs. Photo: Sandiso Phaliso/WCN

In response to a call by anti-eviction campaign group Abahlali BaseMjondolo protests in Cape Town township have caused hundreds of thousands of rands damage and resulted in a Golden Arrow bus being torched.Replacing the bus alone would could R1million, said Golden Arrow spokesperson Bronwen Dyke.

Residents of informal settlements have been called to protest against the slow pace of service delivery by the activist group, ahead of a planned rally on October 28 when a memorandum of grievances will be handed over to Parliament.

Khayelitsha’s Lansdowne Fire Station suffered R15 000 worth of damages after protesters pelted it with rocks on Monday, shattering glass and damaging fire engines.

Traffic lights, street signs have been vandalized and vendor’s stalls in Philippi have been set alight.

City of Cape Town communication manager Charles Cooper said the money spent fixing damaged property could have used for service delivery.

He described the protest action as “crazy”.

“I don’t know what the people are trying to achieve when they damage and vandalise government property,” said Cooper.

He said damages ran into hundreds of thousands of rand, but actual figures would be released in a month’s time.

Abahlali BaseMjondolo Western Cape chairperson Mzonke Poni said the protests were occurring in Cape Town, KwaZulu Natal and the Eastern Cape.

On Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday nights last week protestors burnt tyres and refuse in the streets, blockaded main roads and strew garbage across roads.

Further protests are expected this week and sporadically throughout the month.

Regarding the cost of damages, Poni said they “could not becompared with the cost of damages that affects us on a daily basis”.

“Everyday people die in shack fires caused by a lack of electricity in informal settlements, and people are victims of communicable infections such as TB which are caused by unhygienic conditions that people live with on a daily basis.

“We are saying no one can put a value in a human life.”

Poni said he congratulates the residents of Khayelitsha’s Enkani informal settlement for closing Baden Powel drive last week, residents of TR informal settlement for closing Mew Way road, RR informal settlement for closing Lansdowne road for more than three days, and Philippi residents who have been consistently blockading roads in the area.

Khayelitsha Police spokesperson Anneke Van der Vyver said seven people had been arrested in Khayelitsha in connection with the protests that started on October 1, while Nyanga police station spokesperson Ntomboxolo Sitshitshi said eight suspects had been arrested in Philippi.

Charges included public violence and damage to property. – Sandiso Phaliso, West Cape News