Category Archives: QQ Section

Up To Five Hundred People Left Homeless in the QQ Fire Last Night

Wednesday, 08 December 2010
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Press Statement

Up To Five Hundred People Left Homeless in the QQ Fire Last Night

 




 

The fire that raged through the QQ Section shack settlement in Khayelitsha last night has destroyed up to 100 shacks leaving as many as 500 people homeless. Most people have lost everything including ID books, work clothes, school uniforms, medication and family photographs.

The community built and run crèche has also been destroyed.

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Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha

Update (9:12 p.m.): Between 50 & 100 shacks have been destroyed. The fire brigade arrived late – the media got there long before they did. The community is very angry.

Terrible Shack Fire Currently Raging in QQ Section, Khayelitsha
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape Emergency Press Statement 07/12/2010

A terrible fire is currently raging in the QQ Section settlement in Khayelitsha. More than twenty homes and the community-built creche have already been destroyed. The fire is still raging.

Shack fires are not natural disasters. They are a direct result of the contempt in which the government holds the poor in this country. Shack fires are political.We will never accept that it is normal for the poor to burn.

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Cape Argus: Neighbours’ loos for hire

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=&art_id=vn20100729132844354C241597

Neighbours’ loos for hire

By Natasha Prince and Bronwynne Jooste
Staff Reporters

Some Khayelitsha residents have to pay up to R10 each time they want to use the toilets at their neighbours’ homes because they don’t have their own ablution facilities.

Residents in QQ Section in Site B, who live in shacks, fork out between 50c and R10 to their neighbours who live in formal houses.

In another section of the city’s sprawling township, Site C, residents have to relieve themselves on a stretch of grass in full view of passing cars on the N2.

There are toilets nearby in Site C, but some of these are locked by individual residents who hold the keys, while others are broken, damaged or overflowing with human waste.

Using the stretch of grass as a toilet is dangerous: residents say that they are mugged as they walk to the area. One man was stabbed in the face and robbed of his cellphone earlier this year.

When the Cape Argus visited the area this week, human faeces littered the grassy area and the stench was overpowering.

It is not only adults who use the field as a toilet. Parents fear that their children are risking their lives.

Residents who use the area regularly said they had few options because the closest toilets were too far from their homes.

Some said they walked to a neighbouring area in Site C to use toilets provided by the City of Cape Town.

Thokoza Thulumani, who accompanied her two young daughters when they needed to use the grassy patch, said she “did not feel right” about using the field.

“Sometimes these little children want to run into the street (the N2); it’s not safe for them,” she said.

Mzimasi Kese, 31, said “having to go” in the open made him “feel bad”.

“I don’t feel right because so many people driving past in their cars can see you going.”

Kese said sometimes people brought toilet paper while others used newspaper which they softened by rubbing.

There are 12 concrete flush toilets in Site C.

About six of these are locked and others have been vandalised or are blocked and have plumbing defects.

Nomfusi Jezile, who uses these toilets, said the keys to the locked toilets were kept by some residents and could be obtained when requested.

“It’s better when they keep the keys because the toilets are cleaner and the children can’t play in them,” she said.

Ward councillor Nontsomi Billie said the city had the toilets for the area, but that there was no land on which to erect them.

She said some people in the area used the portable toilet system.

“If the toilets are not enough, they (the residents) should tell the street committee members who report it to me and I contact the city and processes are put in place,” she said.

Cape Times: No kick-off for blackout victims of QQ-section

http://www.capetimes.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5509955

No kick-off for blackout victims of QQ-section

June 11, 2010 Edition 1

Quinton Mtyala

NO electricity for 700 families in QQ-section, Khayelitsha, means that, when the World Cup kicks off in Cape Town tonight, many of them won’t be able to watch.

The City of Cape Town’s failure to move them to one of several sites identified for flood relief victims had caused some residents to protest by blocking off a stretch of Lansdowne Road that passes by QQ-section.

Every winter, informal settlements like QQ section are flooded because they are either located below the water table or close to retention ponds.

Because of this, no utility services can be installed, and this has often been met with violent protest, as happened last year when the people of BT-section closed off a section of Lansdowne Road for more than a month in September.

Last week the city acknowledged that it had been forced to delay plans to move most of the 1 656 families living below the water table in Khayelitsha owing to objections by residents in the township’s relatively well-off Elitha Park.

At a meeting in Site B earlier this week, Premier Helen Zille said that if an agreement could not be reached with those objecting to the flood relief areas by the end of this month, R96 million allocated to the project would have to be returned to the provincial Treasury.

Mbongeni Mkhaliphi, a community activist and protest organiser in the area, said people there had on three occasions been promised that they would be moved to other areas, but nothing had come of it.

Three hundred families were supposed to have been moved this winter.

“They promised us land in Mfuleni, but nothing has come of it. Between June and September we were supposed to move… now they say it will only happen next year,” said Mkhaliphi.

quinton.mtyala@inl.co.za

Opening of New Office of Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape – 26th April 2010

Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape

Open Invitation: Opening of New Office of Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape

The ABM-WC would like to invite all its supporters, Community Based Organization, Non Governmental Organization to join us on opening of our new offices who are based at QQ section.

And all Media agencies are also invited

The office is currently operating but will be open officially on Monday: The 26th April 2010

Time: 10:00 am till 14hrs.

For more info please contact: Nobantu Goniwe (Office Administrator) 078 760 5246 of Mzonke Poni 073 2562 036 or you can email us at abmwesterncape@abahlali.org