Category Archives: repression

The Mercury: Shack dwellers vow to march

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5390599

Shack dwellers vow to march

March 15, 2010 Edition 1

GUGU MBONAMBI

Abahlali Basemjondolo yesterday vowed to go ahead with a march on March 22 – despite the eThekwini municipality refusing it permission to do so.

The shack dwellers’ movement has also threatened to take legal action against municipal manager Michael Sutcliffe, who it blames for not being granted a permit to march.

Abahlali spokesman Mnikelo Ndabankulu said Sutcliffe’s office had responded that the city did not have sufficient police officers to provide security at the march.

“If the city does not have enough police to monitor about 20 000 people who will be marching for just four to five hours on one day, how can they say that Durban has enough police and the capacity to protect the whole world for a month when they come for the World Cup?” he asked.

Delay

Ndabankulu said it was common practice for the city to delay its response to Abahlali’s requests to march.

“In 2007, our movement was banned from marching because the city claimed that our organisation was not known.

“We took Sutcliffe and former KwaZulu-Natal transport and community safety and liaison MEC Bheki Cele to court and won the case. If we have to go to court again before marching, we will do so,” he said.

The movement wants to march to call for an investigation into the “double ownership” of RDP houses and for transparency from the municipality in their allocation.

Metro police spokeswoman Joyce Khuzwayo said: “We were informed by the city that all marches should be put on hold for now because they will clash with the city’s preparations for the World Cup.”

The Mercury was unable to get comment from Sutcliffe.

Kennedy Road Development Committee Attacked – People Have Been Killed

Kennedy Road Development Committee (KRDC)
Emergency Press Release, Sunday 27 September 2009

Kennedy Road Development Committee Attacked – People Have Been Killed

Last night at about 11:30 a group of about 40 men heavily armed with guns, bush knives and even a sword attacked a meeting of the Kennedy Road Development Committee (KRDC) in the Kennedy Road community hall. There was no warning and the attack was a complete surprise. The Abahlali baseMjondolo Youth League was holding an all night camp for the Youth League nearby. The camp was not attacked but the people at the camp were intimidated and threatened. An international film crew at the camp witnessed the attack.

The men who attacked were shouting: ‘The AmaMpondo are taking over Kennedy. Kennedy is for the AmaZulu.” The KRDC and other community members who rushed to their aid were unarmed but tried to defend themselves as best they could. Some people were killed. We can’t yet say exactly how many.

The attackers broke everything that they could including the windows in the hall. It was later discovered that they had destroyed 15 houses belonging to people on or connected to the KRDC before launching their attack. They were knocking on each door shouting ‘All the amaZulu must come out’ and then destroying the shacks. Some are saying that three people are dead. Some are saying that five people are dead. Many people are also very seriously injured. As far as we know two of the attackers were killed when people managed to take their bush knives off them. This was self defense.

The Sydenham police were called but they did not come. They said that they had no vans available but they didn’t radio their vans to come. This has led some people to conclude that this was a carefully planned attack on the movement and that the police knew in advance that it had been planned and stayed away on purpose. Why else would the police refuse to come when they are being called while people are being openly murdered? When the attack happened one officer from Crime Intelligence was there in plain clothes.

This morning the police arrived under the authority of Glen Nayager and made eight arrests. As far as we can tell only members of the Kennedy Road Development Committee (KRDC) have been arrested and not one of the perpetrators has been arrested. If this is true it indicates clearly that the police are part of this attack on the KRDC. It also seems that the police are only taking statements from the people that attacked us! Some of the people that they have arrested were not even at Kennedy Road when we were attacked. They were in Claremont for an imfene dance. These arrests feel to us like the Kennedy Six scandal all over again but this time with an ethnic side to it because all the people who are arrested are amaMpondo.

We believe that this attack has been planned and organised by Gumede, from the Lacy Road settlement, who is the head of the Branch Executive Committee of the local ANC. He is a former MK soldier and is armed. There has never been political freedom in Lacy Road. Since 2005 we have been told that anyone wearing the red shirt of Abahlali baseMjondolo in Lacy Road will be killed. In 2006 Gumede personally threatened Abahlali baseMjondolo member and Lacy Road resident M’du Hlongwa with death for wearing a read shirt in the settlement. But anyone can wear any shirt of any politics that they like in our settlements. You will see ANC, COPE, IFP and SACP shirts in kennedy Road and inall Abahlali settlements. We are democrats. Our politics is a politics of open and free discussion – not violence and intimidation.

This is not the first time that our movement has been attacked. Last year both Mzonke Poni, head of AbM in the Western Cape, and S’bu Zikode, head of AbM in KwaZulu-Natal, were attacked and seriously beaten by mysterious groups of well organised and equipped young men. These attacks happened a few days apart although one was in Durban and the other in Cape Town. The men who attacked Zikode said that he was selling Kennedy to the AmaMpondo. Some time after the attacks on Mzonke and S’bu Mashumi Figland, Deputy President of Abahlali baseMjondolo who was then also the elected Chairperson of the Kennedy Road Development Committee, was also attacked and seriously beaten. Again the attack was very well organised and carried out by a mysterious group of young men who suddenly arrived out of nowhere in a bakkie. During the attack Mashumi, who is Xhosa, was told that the AmaMpondo must leave Durban and go back to the Eastern Cape.

The ethnic politics in the local ANC started with Jacob Zuma’s election campaign. Before then it was unknown in the local ANC and unknown in our settlement. People in the local ANC started to say ‘now is the time for the amaZulu’. They started to tell their (few) people in Kennedy Road that they ‘must take the settlement back from the amaMpondo’. This ethnic politics started with Zuma’s election campaign and so it his responsibility to take this politics out of the ANC and out of our settlement. We expect him to immediately condemn it and to immediately act against it.

Gumede, head of the local BEC of the ANC, has been trying by all means to undermine the KRDC and Abahlali baseMjondolo for many years. He has always failed. The membership of the movement continues to grow (we reached 10 000 paid up members at the AGM in November last year). Every year we have open elections by secret ballot in Kennedy Road and every year people vote for who they want to represent them on the KRDC. The ANC is free to nominate candidates for these elections and to test their popularity against the will of the people.

We believe that Gumede, with the support of ward councillor Yakoob Baig, has tried to build a coalition against the KRDC in order to attack it violently. Gumede has recently said publicly that he will turn the Abahlali baseMjondolo office into an ANC office. His coalition is still small but it is dangerous because it is now a militia. They have found 4 types of people that want to attack the KRDC:

1. People who want to follow an ethnic politics: The movement accepts all shack dwellers on an equal basis. We do not care where a person was born or what language they speak. This has caused those who want an ethnic politics to oppose us. We stood with the people born in other countries last year – now we are being attacked in the same way that they were attacked.

2. Criminals: We have a Safety & Security committee and we have been working to get the criminals out of our settlement. In recent months we have been working very well with the local police to get criminals arrested. We have also put a time limit on the shebeens saying that they must close at 10:00 p.m. so that people can sleep properly and that there is no violence, especially violence against women, when people get too drunk. The criminals and some shebeen owners do not like what the KRDC is doing to make the settlement safe for everybody.

3. People who want Gumede’s patronage: Every time the movement wins a small victory, like getting toilets built or even just cleaned, Gumede tries to ensure that the jobs go only to his people – to ANC supporters. We are opposed to development becoming misused for party politics and we are opposed to corruption. The movement oppose this in all the settlements where we have members. The people in Kennedy Road who want to get Gumede’s jobs are also unhappy with what we are doing. We also think that now that the Abahlali baseMjondolo has won the struggle against the eviction and eradication of Kennedy Road, and for the up grade of the settlement where it is, these people want to use violence to take over the settlement so that they can get the contacts and the power to allocate houses that they think will come with the upgrade won for the community by Abahlali baseMjondolo. We suspect that Gumede has promised them these contracts and the power to allocate houses. This is how local party politics works across Durban.

4. People who are making money from electricity: Operation Khanyisa, in which we connect people to electricity, is for free. People who were charging to connect people to electricity see it as a threat to the business that they have made out of the Municipality’s denial of electricity to shack dwellers.

The next Kennedy Road AGM is coming very soon soon. Once again the people of Kennedy Road can vote by secret ballot counted by an outsider for who ever they want to represent them. The people who attacked us last night do not want democracy. If they felt that they had support in the community they could just have waited for the AGM and put up candidates. We strongly believe that they attacked us before the AGM because they know that they will not succeed at the AGM.

What Gumede, and Baig are doing is not just an attack on the KRDC. It is also an attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo. And it is also an attack on democracy in South Africa. They have now set set up a militia to destroy the KRDC and attack the movement. We have no armed wing. We have never attacked anyone. Our politics is a politics of open meetings and popular democracy. It is a politics of debating and discussing and working things out together. The politics that is being used to attack us is a politics of war. Gumede was always a shack lord in Lacy Road. He has now become a war lord too. Abahlali baseMjondolo will mobilise its members across the city, the province and the country against Gumede and anyone and everyone who supports or tolerates his warlordism. We will also mobilise our supporters internationally against Gumede and his warlordism.

We see no difference between what is being done to us and what the apartheid regime did with the Witdoeke in the shack settlements in Cape Town in the 1980s.

After what has happened many people are saying to us that they do not trust the police. They are asking for the army to be sent in as the army might be neutral. Certainly no one trusts the Sydenham police to be neutral.

As we write the attacks and threats continue. We are still under attack. A member of the Saftey & Security committee, affiliated to the KRDC, was stabbed and killed this morning. He was not there last night. He was doing the imfene dance in Claremont. After he was stabbed the attackers tried to chase the ambulance away.

Gumede and his militia are not just a threat to us and our community. They are a threat to democracy in South Africa. It is very clear that democracy is under attack.

As we are sending this statement a helicopter and many more police officers are arriving. We hope that they will be neutral and follow the law – not Gumede’s politics of war. But as far as we can tell the police that are here are just looking for statements against the KRDC – those who were ambushed in the night! The violence is continuing. Gumede’s people are saying that if Mashumi Figlan returns to Kennedy he will be killed. We do not have confidence that he and others will be protected by the police. None of the perpetrators of the attacks last night have been arrested. We are not armed. People are very scared that there will be more attacks. They are packing their bags and fleeing the settlement. Hundreds, maybe even thousands have already fled. Some of us came to this settlement in the 80s and 90s as refugees from political violence. Now we are being made refugees again for the crime of taking democracy seriously and believing that we could choose our own politics.

Things are still confused. This statement was prepared in this confusion. We couldn’t even get all the contact people together at the same time. If there are any errors or important things left out of this statement we will correct them or add them when we can talk to everyone safely and send out a more detailed statement. Right now our main task is to make sure that people are safe – including those locked in the Sydenham Police station. We will work on that first. Once everyone is safe we will have careful discussions with everyone and issue a more full and detailed statement.

For more information and breaking news please contact the following members of the Kennedy Road Development Committee:

Mzwakhe Mdlalose: 072 132 8458
Anton Zamisa: 079 380 1759
Bheki Simelane: 078 598 9491
Nokutula Manyawo: 083 949 1379

eShowe: Death Threats, Ban on Political Meetings, Mass Evictions, Corruption, Water Disconnected

Wednesday, 15 July 2009
Press Statement from Residents of Tin Town Settlement, King Dinuzulu Township, eShowe

Serious Crisis in Tin Town as Residents Confront Mass Illegal Evictions, Death Threats, A Ban on Political Meetings, Rampant Corruption and Denial of Basic Services Including Water

On Saturday, a woman in the Tin Town settlement, King Dinuzulu township, eShowe was threatened with necklacing by the Community Liaison Officer (CLO) for Ward 13 if she held a community meeting in her home to discuss shack demolitions with representatives from Abahlali baseMjondolo in Durban.

Families are being illegally evicted every Thursday and a total of two thousand families face eviction.

Residents in Tin Town are living in fear. Political meetings have been banned by the local councillor and when the CLO heard that the meeting with Abahlali baseMjondolo was to go ahead on Sunday he threatened the woman that had offered to host it that she would be necklaced and her home burnt to the ground, with her children inside. Other Tin Town shack-dwellers, seeking to attend the meeting, were also threatened. The CLO said they would be tied up, thrown in the boot of a car and left to starve or suffocate.

In the past threats of violence against political activities and any attempt at community organising have been issued directly from the councillors’ office.

The councillor’s office recently cut off the water to the settlement, affecting an estimated 200 households, in efforts to chase residents from their shacks.

Women in the area have been making telephone calls to Abahlali baseMjondolo day and night. They fear the councillor and they fear the demolitions issued by the Umlalazi municipality that have already left 8 families homeless.

Council officials have been going door-to-door, telling residents they must tear down their shacks themselves, or else an eviction team will return at any time to carry out the job. Evictions are being carried out every Thursday. On 9 July 2009, 8 families were ejected from their homes and their shacks and all their belongings destroyed by the eviction team. They were not issued with a PIE notice or given warning of the demolition. These evictions were therefore illegal and criminal acts.

The evictions in Tin Town began upon the completion of the first houses in Sunnydale, a nearby Umlalazi Municipality housing project, constructed by Umpheme Development Pty (Ltd).

The agreement between the developer and the municipality was that those allocated new houses were to demolish their own shacks. However, the families currently living in Tin Town shacks are renters, and have not been allocated houses. Those who are being allocated houses are shack lords who are not living in the shacks that the own. They are renting out shacks in Tin Town for R130 per month, and living in homes outside the area.

Therefore the shack lords are collecting their allocated houses, while their renters are being illegally put out on the street with nowhere else to go.

Residents also say that, while shack-dwellers are being left homeless in Tin Town, families from as far as Pietermaritzburg have moved into the new housing project along with the shack lords.

In spite of threats by the councillor, a small community meeting, with Abahlali baseMjondolo, went ahead this Sunday. It was held secretly in a nearby forest. It could not be a proper mass meeting because of the death threats. Community representatives at this meeting decided to issue this press release but to do so anonymously because death threats that have been issued against anyone speaking up against the evictions. Since the meeting residents have been calling the Abahlali baseMjondolo head office to say they wanted to attend the meeting but were too scared or had not bee informed about it as open mobilisation was not possible.

The councillor is a former war lord. He remains a very dangerous man.

Following the meeting, Abahlali baseMjondolo contacted the Umlalazi municipality and the development agency working on the housing project. They say they were unaware that those living in the shacks were renters and were being left homeless in the demolitions.

The municipality has accordingly suspended all demolitions in order to investigate the matter. Abahlali baseMjondolo commends the municipality on this action.

Representatives from the municipality and the development agency are scheduled to visit Tin Town this week. Abahlali baseMjondolo is hopeful that these meetings will prevent any further evictions and homelessness in Tin Town and that shack-dwellers may be granted houses in the new project.

Currently, in Tin Town, there is only one source of water for 200 families. A pipe sprays water up from the ground, which then must be fitted with a hose to fill a bucket (See photo). There are no toilets and no electricity. This is unacceptable.

The demolition of homes in Tin Town is part of a provincial effort to rid KwaZulu-Natal of shack settlements in accordance with the notorious Slums Act. Abahlali baseMjondolo has challenged the Slums Act in the Constitutional Court. This is a clear case where demolitions and evictions are benefiting shack lords, and not the people of Tin Town.

Abahlali baseMjondolo has fought against political repression and threats of violence against residents by councillors and shack lords in other communities. We have won many of these battles – for instance in Motala Heights. The movement condemns the actions of the councillor in Tin Town and will stand firm with Tin Town residents against the councillor.

We welcome the promise by the municipality and the developer to suspend the evictions and to visit the community to see the situation for themselves. However immediate action must also be taken against the extreme political intimidation in the area – it is unacceptable that a councillor can ban political meetings and issue death threats against people. It is also unacceptable that people are being denied basic services, especially water.

Problems like this occur when the government and developers negotiate with councillors instead of communities.

At this stage it is not possible for any contact people in eShowe to be listed on this press release. However we urge the media, the churches and all progressive organisations to visit the area and to see the situation for themselves. However please understand that you will probably have to speak to people secretly and anonymously.

Updates on the situation in Tin Town can be obtained from the Abahlali baseMjondolo office at 031 – 2691822.

15 Protestors Shot With Rubber Bullets in Cape Town

http://www.khayelitshastruggles.com/2009/07/re-urgent-update-on-abm-wc-protest.html

Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Re: an urgent update on ABM-WC Protest

5 Protestors Shot With Rubber Bullets in Cape Town

The ABM-WC is calling an end to state criminality of criminalizing it’s members by applying old apartheid tactics of arresting, assaulting, and shooting people with rubber bullets when they exercise their right to freedom of expression and the right to protest.

The movement will not be silenced by the state under the leadership of so called ANC government, and will continue to be vocal using any forms of engagement.

The ANC NWC had issued the following press statement, calling on communities not engaging government on mass base activities and as ABM-WC we are calling on to the ANC-NWC not on employing the old regime tactics through using police force to disperse people and we are saying they must come down and listen at peoples demands and not be reactional as their head of human settlement Tokyo who owns a 56 million house, while the poor are struggling to get the security of tenure to the land that they have occupied for years, still dumped our site the cities and living under appalling conditions with no access to clean water and toilets.

Update no 1:

More than 15 people were shot at by rubber bullets by reactional SAPS and Metropolice Members at yesterdays protest at Khayelitsha and one of them is under critical condition at Grooteschuur Hospital. He is the only bread winner for his family and he is having 5 children, which four of them are still schooling, and he is between the age of 45 and 50.

Currently we are not aware of any arrests that have been made and we’ll be able to update the media regard to arrests during the course of the day and with further injuries.

Currently the Landsdown road from Steve Biko Drive to Bonga drive is still not working and QQ, RR, and BM residents will make sure that today as early as 08:HRS in the morning they continue with their freedom of expression through mass base activities and if Dan Plato and his disaster management team continues with their attitude of undermining the poor, we will also continue with our protest till he comes down to the poor.

PLEASE NOTE: on the 20th July 2009 Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape will be marching to the City of Cape Town in support of Macassar Village land occupation and against city’s illegal demolitions of peoples structures at Macassar Village and in demand of peoples material that were confiscated illegal by so called city’s anti land invasion unit.

for more info please call:

for macassar village please call Theliwe Macekiswana at 083…

For Khayelitsha Protest please call Mbongeni Mkhalipi at 076 981 6945 for QQ and RR
Mthobeli Qona at 076 875 9533 for QQ, RR and BM
Cebo at 073 5657850 for PJS

For ABM-WC march and further information please call Mzonke Poni ABM-WC chairperson at 073 2562 036

ANC NWC MEDIA STATEMENT ON SERVICE DELIVERY PROTESTS

The African National Congress (ANC) National Working Committee (NWC) today (13 July 2009) held its regular meeting at Chief Albert Luthuli House in Johannesburg to deliberate on various challenges facing the organisation.

Noting the various service delivery protests in some parts of the country, the NWC expressed concern at the violent nature of the demonstrations. The burning of buildings and stoning of vehicles have been among the violent tactics employed by the protesters.

We call on our people to stop the violence and engage meaningfully with leaders at all levels to express their concerns.

Issued by:
Brian Sokutu
African National Congress
Chief Albert Luthuli House
54 Sauer Street
Johannesburg 2001

13 July 2009

Enquiries:
Brian Sokutu 071 671 6899

Tokyo Sexwale threatens ‘zero tolerance’ to protest under ‘other flags’

Tokyo Sekwale, owner of a R56 million house, and a man who cited matchbox houses as one of his reasons for taking up arms against apartheid, declares protest against ‘housing’ far worse than apartheid’s matchbox houses to be ‘anarchy’ that will be met with ‘zero tolerance’….Click here to read the transcript of this press conference.

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=124&art_id=vn20090701051810350C862668

Sexwale warns unruly protesters

July 01 2009 at 10:45AM

By Gaye Davis

Human Settlements Minister Tokyo Sexwale has warned that the government will take tough action against people who want to render any part of the country ungovernable.

“There are limits to social and political activism,” he said on Tuesday. He was referring to violent protests over housing and services, and also to homeowners in towns deciding to withhold paying their rates.

Sexwale said the government was sensitive to the plight of people struggling with poverty.

“We know about, the recession, about people losing their jobs,” he said. But where the government saw anarchy, it had to put a stop to it.

“There should be zero tolerance for people who want to render any part of this country ungovernable,” he said.

Sexwale was responding to questions at a briefing after delivering his budget vote in Parliament, where he was asked about protests linked to the government’s flagship N2 Gateway housing project in Cape Town, which has been plagued by problems.

He said the government would continue to engage residents, but said: “The message must go out that the government does not allow anarchy, there has to be consistency and stability.”

Sexwale said it was necessary for the government to engage, and that it should “not easily be provoked into doing things you regret”. But he added: “Where the law’s got to roll in, it will do that.”

He said the government had to distinguish between organisations and activists acting legitimately and those “acting under other flags”.

But Sexwale admitted mistakes had been made with the N2 Gateway that could have been avoided.

o This article was originally published on page 6 of The Star on July 01, 2009