Category Archives: Pemary Ridge

Radio 786: Rights Group Claim Police Abuse

http://www.radio786.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1373:rights-group-claim-police-abuse&catid=7:newscategory&Itemid=2

Rights Group Claim Police Abuse
Monday, 16 November 2009 09:10

Police shot on the home of Philani Zungu, the chairperson of the Abahlali baseMjondolo in Pemary Ridge. At least one bullet ripped through the chairperson house.

The community confirmed that the police were using live ammunition when they found the bullet casings the following morning.

Members of the Abahlali baseMjondolo in Pemary Ridge Durban have complained of repeated abuse of their members by the police.

Many of the Pemary ridge settlement spent the night hiding out in bushes to prevent the police brutality. The community says it is the third time, since the Kennedy Road attacks, that the Sydenham police have brutally harassed and arrested residents of Pemary Ridge.

It is said that the police attacks on Pemary Ridge are part of the wider ongoing attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo.

Digital Journal: Weekend attack on S.African shanty town allegedly led by police

http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/282217#tab=comments&sc=0&contribute=&local=

Weekend attack on S.African shanty town allegedly led by police

Human rights groups have claimed that the police attacked Pemary Ridge, an informal community in Durban, South Africa on November 14th, randomly beating people.

A local group that unifies and advocates for shack dwellers in South Africa claims that the Sydenham Police in Durban, South Africa raided Pemary Ridge on Saturday night. Arriving in vans, the police are alleged to have terrorized the community by breaking down doors, shooting at people and randomly beating residents. While some people created a tire fire, supposedly in protest of the raid, others fled their homes to hide in bushes for the night. The November 14th attack was preceded by two other attacks on Pemary Ridge and one in September on a shanty town on Kennedy Road, Durban.

Abahlali baseMjondolo said 13 residents of Pemary Ridge were arrested in Saturday’s violent raid, but all charges against them were dropped Monday. The group outlined tactics the police have taken against shanty town residents on their website.

“The police always make their arrests on Fridays or on public holidays as it is difficult to get a lawyer at these times and people can be held (and sometimes assaulted in detention) until the courts reopen. The police are systematically abusing their powers to arrest and detain people as a form of intimidation. They routinely arrest and detain people when they know very well that they have no evidence against them will not be able to go to trial.

The Pemary Ridge community are planning various strategies to hold the police accountable for this attack and to prevent future attacks. The media are encouraged to seriously investigate the systemic unlawful and violent abuse of the poor in general, and grassroots activists in particular, at the hands of the police.”

Shanty towns likely go back thousands of years. Modern shanty towns are created by people who have left their rural homes to seek a better life in the city. Usually poor and landless, they are people who either cannot get housing or cannot afford available housing, and who subsequently build their own homes on the outskirts of the city. The unplanned neighbourhoods that arise are found in urban centers in Africa, Asia and South America, and are not municipally ordained. Lacking infrastructure, such as water, sanitation and electricity, the communities can be extremely unhealthy for their residents. Shanty towns have largely been under threat. Some countries, such as Kenya, have been working to upgrade the slums to provide residents with better housing, while other countries have been bulldozing the intentionally-built communities.

The South African government tried to enact a law that would allow police to destroy shanty towns earlier this year. However shanty town residents successfully challenged that law. In spite of having won the right to live in their self-made homes, Durban’s shack dwellers have been under attack in the past few months, and community leaders say that they are forced to conduct their legal activities in secrecy, as if they were living under apartheid. A movement is building in South Africa, calling on the President to hold an inquiry into the violence.

An attack in September on another informal settlement in Durban left two people dead. The attack is said to have been the responsibility of the ANC, and the religious community is decrying the apparent lack of police protection for the poor.

South Africa will be holding the FIFA World Cup in 2010 and there have already been violent clashes between the country’s poor and police during demonstrations protesting the spending of money on building a new stadium. Durban will be hiring 41,000 new police officers to help keep the peace during the FIFA World Cup next year. It is expected that half a million people will come to South Africa for the World Cup.

Jacob Zuma was elected as South Africa’s president this summer with a platform that promised to improve life for South Africa’s poor.

About one out of every ten people in South Africa lives in a shanty town — about 1 million people. South Africa has been hard hit by the recession and has an unemployment rate of 23%.

Someone Needs to Answer for the Police Attack on Pemary Ridge

16 November, 20:42
Abahlali basePemary Ridge Press Statement

All Charges Dropped Against the Pemary 13, But Someone Needs to Answer for Police Attacks

Abahlali basePemary Ridge is happy that all charges were dropped against 13 of our members, who were arrested in a brutal attack last Friday by the Sydenham police.

Abahlali has said, since 2005, “My lawyer is my neighbour.” In court today, the Pemary 13 were not represented by a lawyer, but by the Chairperson of Abahlali baseMotala Heights , Shamita Naidoo, who learned about justice through years of experience working in her community, and about the law seeing case after political case brought by police against shack-dwellers. Shamita spoke powerfully and with a lot of anger against the police violence so common in Abahlali communities, and in all shack settlements.

All the charges were dropped. But someone needs to answer for what happened last Friday night. If there was no case against us, why were we shot at, beaten, tortured, abused and detained over the whole weekend?

Why is it us, and not the ratepayers who live across the street, that almost every week are attacked by police? Is it because we are poor? Is it because we are black? Is it because we are not welcome in Reservoir Hills? Not welcome in our own city? Not welcome in our own country? Is it because our settlement has been strongly Abahlali baseMjondolo since 2005 and that, therefore, we refuse to accept that we do not count in this society?

Why were we arrested, when it was the police who were committing crimes in Pemary on Friday night? Why does no one take seriously the fact that if you are a poor person the police are some of the dangerous criminals that you will ever have to confront?

The police are abusing us, and they are abusing government resources. Budgets for bullets, for cars, for lawyers, all were spent just to beat, shoot at and arrest shack-dwellers that committed no crime. The resources used to shoot at, beat and arrest innocent people could have been used to protect us. We as the poor are also getting robbed, stabbed and shot dead by criminals. We cannot afford private security. We need to be safe and yet all the police do in our communities is to torture and arrest us. Being poor has been turned into a crime. Being a poor person who doesn’t know your place – who insists on your right to be political, to think and to speak for yourself – has been turned into an even bigger crime.

These cases take our communities’ resources too. These cases take energy, and poor people’s finances. The people, who were arrested, missed school and work. One of the arrested was supposed to write his Matric exam today. People who were injured have to pay for a doctor. Some of them could not go to work or school today. Those who come to court in solidarity must take off work and school, and pay for taxi fares. If you are beaten with your guitar and you are a person that loves to make music you will have to buy a new guitar. If your door is kicked in you will have to fix that door. All these resources are wasted just because of the police attacking us. A person can lose their job for missing even one day of work.

We all need to be safe and happy in this country, not just some of us, not just a part of us – all of us. This is our position and we will stick to it through all kinds of attacks. A person is a person whether they find themselves in a shack or in a big house with a fence and a burglar alarm and private security.

For more information and comment please contact

Shamita Naidoo 074 315 7962
Philani Zungu 072 96 29312

All Charges Dropped Against the Pemary Ridge 13

All Charges Dropped Against the Pemary Ridge 13

Abahlali baseMjondolo was unable to secure a lawyer to represent the Pemary Ridge 13 in the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court this morning. They were represented by Shamita Naidoo, Chairperson of the Motala Heights Abahlali baseMjondolo branch. She made a vigorous argument against police brutality against shack dwellers in general, and the Pemary Ridge settlement in particular, and showed how the police claim to be victims of the people they brutally and unlawfully assaulted was entirely ludicrous.

All charges were dropped against the 13.

The police always make their arrests on Fridays or on public holidays as it is difficult to get a lawyer at these times and people can be held (and sometimes assaulted in detention) until the courts reopen. The police are systematically abusing their powers to arrest and detain people as a form of intimidation. They routinely arrest and detain people when they know very well that they have no evidence against them will not be able to go to trial.

The Pemary Ridge community are planning various strategies to hold the police accountable for this attack and to prevent future attacks. The media are encouraged to seriously investigate the systemic unlawful and violent abuse of the poor in general, and grassroots activists in particular, at the hands of the police.

The old Abahlali slogan “Your neighbour is your lawyer” was very true today.

For more information contact:

Philani Zungu, Chairperson of the Pemary Ridge Abahlali baseMjondolo Branch: 072 962 9312
Shamita Naidoo, Chairperson of the Motala Heights Abahlali baseMjondolo Branch: 074 315 7962

Notes on the Police Attack on the Pemary Ridge Settlement

14 November 2009
Notes on the Police Attack on the Pemary Ridge Settlement

The Sydenham police arrived at Pemary Ridge at around 8pm on Friday night in one private car.Three police officers first went to a woman’s tuck shop. They found that the shop was closed, and proceeded to kick down the front door. The woman, hearing the police and fearing they would damage her shop, entered through the back door. When she entered, they arrested her for having bottles of beer in her shop.

In the hours that followed, the police tore through the settlement, kicking down doors, issuing beatings with fists, batons, and even household items. The police shot, at random, with live ammunition, within close range of people and their homes. They assaulted both women and men.

Before the shooting began, one man, who was walking by the tuck shop of the arrested woman, was beaten by police, without explanation. Another man, who was walking home from work, unaware of what was happening in the settlement, was beaten on the street. He was told by police officers that “it was to teach you people a lesson,” and so that when he returned home injured from work, “that lesson would be brought back to the community.”

Other people were beaten by police inside their homes. One man from the Arnett Drive settlement was visiting friends, sitting inside and talking, after work. The police kicked down the door, shouting that they were “looking for ganja.” He, the two other men and two women inside, said they did not have any ganja. The police said, “don’t make us look stupid” and that they “smelled ganja.” The man said whatever the police thought they were smelling was not ganja; he drinks alcohol, but does not smoke ganja. A police officer then hit him, repeatedly, for “talking back,” and for “trying to make them look stupid.” The officers then began beating all 5 people inside the home, including the two women. Blood covered the floor of the home, and the door remains off its hinges.

The police were not finished. Shortly thereafter, once another police van had arrived, the officers returned to the home, and pulled the man that they had already assaulted outside. They dragged him to the street that runs along the top of the settlement, and then beat him bloody again with batons and fists all over his body – injuring especially, his back and knees. The police said that they were “teaching him a lesson.” With difficulty, the man managed to escape, and ran to the bush to hide.

Some people gathered outside to see what was happening: while standing and talking, both women and men were beaten by police. An estimated two men and three women were arrested. Other police officers began shooting, with live ammunition, at random, in close range of people and their homes. People ran, and hid in the bush.

Many women in the settlement then began to form a barricade in the street at the top of the settlement. At first, the women put stones and a log in the street, and then they put tires and set the barricade alight. Later, the police forced some of the people they arrested to remove the smouldering remnants of the barricade with their bare hands.

Again, the police returned to settlement, with an estimated additional 14 or 15 officers. The police, again, shot live ammunition at random, while most people hid in the bush.

13 women and men were arrested. It is difficult to estimate how many people have been injured at this stage. However, the 13 people arrested apparently were assaulted, their friends and families members, who witnessed the beatings, say. Another 6 people, among those who remained at the settlement overnight, had visible injuries, swollen wounds and bleeding. There have been no reported bullet wounds, despite that police, on two separate occasions, fired live ammunition inside the settlement.

Philani Zungu is the former Vice President of Abahlali andthe current chairperson of Abahlali baseMjondolo in Pemary Ridge. Philani’s home was deliberately shot through with at least one bullet. The police were using live ammunition that night, as the community confirmed when they found the bullet casings the following day. At the time, people were fearful that this was a shoot-to-kill scenario. Many fled the settlement when the first round of shooting began. Some hid in the bush down near the river while the police fired. After the second round of police shooting, some people left the settlement entirely for the night, as they feared the police would return. Residents went to the Arnett Drive settlement (also affiliated to Abahlali baseMjondolo) for the night, or to friend and family homes elsewhere.

At 11:30pm, residents themselves called an ambulance. The ambulance arrived at around 12:30am. The ambulance took one man to the hospital, with head injuries from police beatings. The others, who were also injured and bleeding, were not taken to hospital, as the ambulance attendants said their injuries were not serious enough.

Several Abahlali members from Pemary Ridge went to the Sydenham police station around 2:30am to inquire about those who had been arrested. A police officer told them that 13 people were arrested. He said they could not see the arrested, and that visiting hours were at 12pm on Saturday. He said that the arrested had not been charged yet, but that they would appear in the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court on Monday. When asked if those arrested had received medical attention, he denied that they were injured. He said that the 11 arrested were not injured, and so have not received any medical attention.

The local Abahlali baseMjondolo branch organised a small press conference in the settlement this morning. About 60 residents attended the press conference. Later on an Abahlali baseMjondolo delegation went to the Sydenham Police station to demand a meeting with the police. The officers on duty used the excuse that they could not speak for those on duty last night. However a few members of the delegation were allowed to visit the prisoners. The prisoners said that four of them are seriously injured and that their requests for medical attention had been refused. Medical attention for the four was requested by the visitors but the police told them that ‘we know when to call a doctor and when not to. Who the hell are you to tell us how to do our job?’ The detainees have still not been charged. It was confirmed that they are scheduled to appear in the Pinetown Magistrate’s court on Monday.

This is the third time, since the attacks in Kennedy Road, that the Sydenham police have brutally harassed and arrested residents of Pemary Ridge. The last two times, the police said it was for the self-connection of electricity. Everyone knows that the the police attacks on Pemary Ridge are part of the wider ongoing attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo.

Additional Notes from the Mini-Press Conference at the Settlement – Saturday 12:45

– One woman’s 17 year old son was beaten by police at home. He was arrested and he is writing his matric exam on this Monday, when he is meant to appear in Court.

– One woman was at home with her boyfriend when the police kicked down the door. They said they were looking for alcohol. She and her boyfriend said they didn’t have any alcohol. Her boyfriend was playing guitar at the time. The police grabbed the guitar, and said “what are you doing pretending to be an umulungu in a shack, playing a guitar?”. The police then beat her boyfriend with the guitar. After beating him they then arrested him. The police threw the guitar at the bed, where a 4 year old child was sleeping. The child was hit with the guitar.

– Another woman, age 59, was at home, she was just returning with the water to make glucose for a sick child, a mixture of sugar and salt heated over an electric stove. Her two sons were at home at the time. Soon after she returned, the police kicked down her door, they entered and said they were looking for alcohol. She said that there was no alcohol. They beat her two sons in front of her, and then arrested them.

– The woman who was arrested for having beers at her tuck shop was released a few hours later.