Category Archives: Sharlene Packree

Witness: Amnesty blasts SA government

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=33005

Amnesty blasts SA government
19 Dec 2009
Sharlene Packree

ANGLICAN Bishop Rubin Phillip has backed Amnesty International’s claims that South Africa has failed to investigate the human rights abuses at the Kennedy Road informal settlement in Durban.

Phillip has worked closely with the Abahlali baseMjondolo movement, who fight for the rights of shack dwellers.

In a statement, Amnesty International criticised the government’s failure to investigate murders, violence and other atrocities the community has faced in the past year.

Amnesty International said besides the lack of a proper investigation, the activities of Abahlali baseMjondolo (Abahlali) and the affiliated Kennedy Road Development Committee (KRDC) have been disrupted by the violence and the lives of leaders and supporters placed at risk.

Thabani Ndlovu and Thokozani Mnguni were stabbed to death during a youth camp at the settlement. Other people were injured when about 40 men carrying assegais, knobkierries and guns stormed into the premises on September 26.

Eight people were subsequently arrested and have pending court cases. Six residents are still being held by police even though no charges have been laid.

Phillip and the movement made headlines recently when they questioned the short visiting hours given to them to pray for Abahlali baseMjondolo members in police custody.

Amnesty International said that despite calls since October for an independent and impartial commission of inquiry into the circumstances and extent of the violence and its aftermath, nothing has been done.

Phillip agreed with Amnesty International and said there is an urgent need for an independent investigation into the violence.

“The community continues to be divided, with residents feeling lost because their leadership has been chased away,” he said.

He said church leaders also asked the government for an independent investigation, but this was never addressed.

“It’s important that the truth be established. Abahlali baseMjondolo feel they are being rubbished,” Phillip added.

He said the denial of access to Abahlali baseMjondolo members at Sydenham police station is an example of the abuse Amnesty International are concerned about.

“We can’t even pray for them; this is abuse. These people have suffered enough,” he said.

ANC provincial secretary Sihle Zikalala said it is wrong of Amnesty International to suggest the government is not helping the residents.

He said residents have been engaged about housing issues and have been offered alternatives by local government.

The Witness: Shack dwellers’ victory

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=29444

Shack dwellers’ victory
15 Oct 2009
Sharlene Packree

RESIDENTS of the Kennedy Road settlement in Durban were jubilant
yesterday at the ruling of the Constitutional Court that a law that
would have allowed mass evictions in KwaZulu-Natal is unconstitutional.

Members of the Abahlali baseMjondolo Movement SA, which fights for the
rights of shack dwellers, were present at the Constitutional Court when
the ruling was made.

The group was formed in 2005 after residents staged a massive roadblock
to protest against the sale of land to a local businessman that had been
promised to shack dwellers.

Abahlali vice president Lindela Figlan said the ruling is a huge victory
for shack dwellers in KZN and residents across South Africa.

He said Abahlali are fighting for their rights, which are enshrined in
the Constitution. “This is not only about Abahlali baseMjondolo, but a
victory for every person that lives in a shack.… There will not be any
celebrations as we already knew that we would be successful,” he said.

“I know that residents will be very excited about this as we have been
fighting for this for a long time. It shows government that we are aware
of our constitutional rights,” he said.

• Anglican Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane, who was the guest speaker at
the 30th anniversary celebrations of the Pietermaritzburg Agency for
Christian Social Awareness at the city hall in the capital yesterday,
congratulated Abahlali for exercising their democratic right.

He said: “This indicates that we need now is an engaged citizenry. What
we’ve tended to do is to stand back and allow things to happen to us,
even in our own name. What Abahlali baseMjondolo have shown us is ‘not
in our name and not on our watch’.”

There was no official response yesterday from KZN Human Settlements MEC
Maggie Govender. Her spokesman, Nkululeko Ngcamu, said the MEC will
comment once she has studied the judgment.

Solidarity: Des D’sa Under Attack

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4215707

Arsonists target anti-drug activists
Crime campaigner injured in petrol bombing

January 21, 2008 Edition 3

Sharlene Packree

Desmond D’Sa’s burn scars will forever remind him of the forces opposed to Wentworth’s anti-drug and crime campaign.

On Friday, D’Sa’s Austerville flat was targeted by petrol bomb-wielding arsonists.

In a desperate bid to put out the flames that threatened the lives of his wife and two daughters, D’Sa suffered burns to his hands and face.

Yesterday, the smell of petrol still lingered in the air as D’Sa inspected his home.

The latest attack is the third on the home of an anti-drug campaigner in the area and D’Sa fears that drug lords are using intimidation to get his organisation to back down.

The Wentworth development forum believes that their vocal campaigns against the high crime rate and drug abuse in the community has impacted significantly on drug sales in the area and is seen as a threat to the livelihoods of drug merchants.

Wentworth police spokesman Sgt Balan Reddy confirmed that three cases of arson were being investigated.

The sale of drugs in the community has been a serious concern for many years.

In 2004, President Thabo Mbeki visited the area as part of his election campaign and community members told him prostitution and drug abuse were rife.

D’Sa is well-known for his strong views on drugs, crime and environmental pollution in the south Durban basin.

While he was injured in the arson attack, D’Sa said he would not succumb to the intimidation of drug dealers.

He told the Daily News: “We have started a foot patrol where we monitor the kids at school. We are making sure that these kids have no access to drugs. They are going to school to learn and not peddle drugs.”

Another activist, Cynthia Billings, was also a victim of an arson attack.

Billings said a petrol bomb was thrown into her flat and the resulting fire damaged her furniture and other appliances.

Police opened a case of arson, but no arrests were made.

“These drug lords know they can’t sell their drugs when we are around. This obviously affects their business, so they want to shut us up,” she said.

Billings said D’Sa and other activists who spoke out about these social issues were seen as a major threat to criminals and drug peddlers.

“They see us as a threat and they think they can stop us continuing our work. But we won’t stop fighting to clean up the area,” she added.

D’Sa said some residents knew the identities of the arsonists, but were too scared to speak out for fear of reprisals.

“People are living in fear here. Some are too scared to speak out, while others are harbouring these criminals, who buy them food and clothing,” he said. D’sa said drug dealers marked out specific areas and used teenagers to sell the drugs and carry out arson attacks.

“We are saddled with big drug dealers who are linked to other criminal elements. They need to be dealt with,” he said. “But, we are not scared of them.” The Sheffer family have also been victims of intimidation by gangs in the area.

Two weeks ago, two men smashed seven windows in their flat while the family was asleep.

The gang also tried to set the place alight, but were unsuccessful.

Wesley Sheffer said: “It’s not easy to live in fear. There is no help from the police, who keep losing dockets and fail to investigate the attacks,” he said.

Sheffer and his family have even resorted to living at a relative’s home after fears that the gang might return.

Local councillor Aubrey Snyman said D’Sa is being targeted because of his strong views on social issues.

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4211891

Arsonists Attack Activist’s Flat

January 18, 2008 Edition 3

SHARLENE PACKREE and TROY MARTENS

Community activists in Wentworth have vowed to stand up against intimidation after three separate arson attacks on their homes in less than a month.

In the latest incident, South Durban Community Environmental Alliance chairman Desmond D’sa’s home in Austerville was set alight in an arson attack this morning. This has been confirmed by the Wentworth police.

D’sa told the Daily News he was startled by a loud bang just after midnight and he rushed to the kitchen.

“When I looked on the floor, I saw a plastic bottle with a cloth sticking out of the top. It looked like the cloth had been soaked in petrol,” said D’sa.

He sustained burns to his arms and face while trying to put out the blaze. Firefighters extinguished the fire, which damaged his front door and kitchen appliances.

D’sa has been a vociferous opponent of drugs and crime in the community, and his views against environmental pollution in the south Durban basin area are well known.

Cynthia Billings, who lives in the flat next to D’sa, described how her flat was torched in December and that police were investigating a case of arson.

D’sa said a third community activist’s house was set alight earlier this month. He said he would not be intimidated and would continue to fight for the rights of the poor in the community.

Local councillor Aubrey Snyman visited D’sa’s home this morning and was vocal about the anti-social behaviour in the community.

Daily News: Poor disrupt conference on poverty

http://www.dailynews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3905354

Poor disrupt conference

June 27, 2007 Edition 1

Sharlene Packree

AN academic conference to address world poverty was marred yesterday when a group of angry protesters demonstrated over their exclusion from the meeting.

Disgruntled fishermen, street traders and shack dwellers stormed Durban’s Elangeni Hotel and converged outside the hotel’s main conference room, demanding that they be included in the programme.

Their screams and ululating were heard by the hundreds of delegates inside the hall who were attending the Poverty Challenge 2007 conference.

The protest began just as deputy mayor Logie Naidoo began his speech to welcome delegates to the city. The angry group, wearing blue T-shirts, also demanded that Naidoo leave the conference and listen to their concerns.

Community activist Ashwin Desai, who was a speaker at the conference, then addressed the group and called for representatives to come forward.

Hotel management called the police to control the rowdy crowd, who toyi-toyied while international tourists checked into the hotel.

Louise Motha, a shack dweller [from Abahlali], said she was angry that “rich academics” were having discussions on the issues that affected the poor.

Motha said that the poor should have been given a chance to speak at the conference and “not be discarded like rubbish”.

“Traders cannot trade. Fishermen cannot fish. People live without water and electricity. How can people live like this? There are poor people everywhere and we need our voices to be heard,” she said.

Desmond D’sa, from the Durban South Combined Alliance, said the poor were being pushed out of the city to make more space for the rich.

Philani Zuma, spokesman for the Abahlali Basemjondolo – a group that represents informal settlements – said the city’s poor were the “experts of poverty” and should have been included in the conference.

The conference organisers will meet some of the protesters today to discuss their concerns.