Category Archives: Socio-Economic Rights Institute

SERI: Informal trader beaten by JMPD officers

http://www.seri-sa.org/index.php/38-latest-news/208-seri-press-statement-informal-trader-beaten-by-jmpd-officers-25-november-2013

PRESS STATEMENT

25 November 2013

Informal trader beaten by JMPD officers

Physical abuse, bribery and xenophobia evident in Operation Clean Sweep

On the afternoon of Friday 22 November 2013, Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD) officials assaulted and arrested a number of informal traders in the inner city of Johannesburg. A female trader from Mozambique, who is currently represented by SERI, witnessed the assaults and was subsequently beaten and arrested. Below is an account of the incident drawn from her statement. She remains anonymous as she will be laying charges against the police and fears being victimised. We refer to her below as “Belinda”.

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SERI: Durban Officials Face Imprisonment for Cato Crest Evictions

Issued by: Socio-Economic Rights Institute of SA (SERI)
9 September 2013

DURBAN OFFICIALS FACE IMPRISONMENT FOR CATO CREST EVICTIONS

eThekwini Municipal Manager and Head of the Land Invasions Unit ordered to appear in Durban High Court to explain why they shouldn’t be imprisoned for contempt of court.

On Friday 6 September 2013 Abahlali baseMjondolo and residents of Cato Crest informal settlement approached the Durban High Court for a third time, to prevent the eThekwini Municipality from illegally destroying their homes. They applied for a contempt of court order against eThekwini Municipality. The Durban High Court granted a rule nisi (an interim order to be confirmed at a later date) which compels the Municipal Manager of eThekwini Municipality and the Head of the Land Invasion Unit to appear at court on Thursday 12 September to explain why they should not be imprisoned for 30 days for allowing illegal evictions to continue at Cato Crest in contempt of an order obtained on 2 September which prohibited the demolition of shacks.

The residents were forced to return to court after the municipality continued to illegally evict residents of Cato Crest last week, despite the order which interdicted and restrained the municipality from evicting residents or demolishing their structures without a court order. The order further directed the municipality to construct “temporary habitable dwellings that afford shelter, privacy and amenities at least equivalent to those destroyed, and which are capable of being dismantled, at the site at which their previous informal housing structures were demolished” to the residents whose shacks were demolished on 1 and 2 September. This has not been done.

According to Stuart Wilson, executive director of SERI, “When the state wilfully disobeys a court order, it makes a criminal of itself. It subverts the rule of law. It tears the fabric of our constitutional democracy. It is unacceptable that poor residents of an informal settlement must go to court three times in order to stop the illegal demolition of their homes. It is equally disturbing that the only way to hold a municipality accountable to enforce court orders is to bring individual office-bearers to court on pain of imprisonment for contempt.”

Download the rule nisi for contempt of court order (6 September 2013) here.

Read more on the Cato Crest evictions here.

Contact details:

Kate Tissington, senior researcher at SERI: 011 356 5862 / 072 220 9125 / kate@seri-sa.org

Constitutional Court declares City of Johannesburg’s Housing Policy Unconstitutional

PRESS RELEASE: Johannesburg, 1 December 2011

Issued by:

Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI)

Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS), University of the Witwatersrand

Constitutional Court declares City of Johannesburg’s Housing Policy Unconstitutional

City must provide accommodation to occupiers by 1 April 2012; owner must wait to take control of his property.

The Constitutional Court today declared the City of Johannesburg’s housing policy unconstitutional and ordered the City to provide temporary accommodation to 86 desperately poor people living in Berea in inner city Johannesburg. The Court was ruling on the application of Blue Moonlight Properties to evict the occupiers from its property.

In a unanimous judgment, written by Justice van der Westhuizen, the Court held that the City was both entitled and obliged to provide temporary accommodation to desperately poor people facing homelessness as a result of eviction. The Court also criticised the City’s failure to plan and budget for housing crises and labelled its argument that it was not legally entitled to do so “unconvincing”.

The Court said that the City’s policy of providing shelter to people it removes from allegedly unsafe buildings, but refusing to provide shelter to equally desperate people evicted by private owners, was unreasonable and unconstitutional.

The Court also held that, where a property owner purchases land knowing it to be occupied (as Blue Moonlight did in this case), “an owner may have to be somewhat patient, and accept that the [owner’s] right to occupation may be temporarily restricted” if an eviction would lead to homelessness.

The Court accordingly ordered that the City should provide the occupiers with alternative accommodation “in a location as near as possible to the areas where the property is situated” on or before 1 April 2012. The occupiers will be expected to vacate the property and move to the alternative accommodation by 15 April. The Court held that providing the occupiers with temporary accommodation does not promote so-called ‘queue-jumping’.

Morgan Courtenay, the occupiers’ attorney at the Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS), based at the University of the Witwatersrand, said “this is a huge victory for the poor generally and for the occupiers in particular. We call on the City to immediately take steps to implement the Court’s order and to carefully consult with the occupiers and their representatives to this end”.

Jackie Dugard, executive director of the Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI) said “the City has been in a state of denial about the needs of poor and desperate people under threat of eviction by private landlords within its jurisdiction. That must now end. The Court has recognised that the state has obligations towards poor people regardless of whether a state or private entity evicts. The City must begin to engage actively with its obligations and budget to give effect to them.”

CALS – together with Advocates Paul Kennedy SC, Heidi Barnes and Stuart Wilson (SERI’s Director of Litigation) – acted for the occupiers in court. The judgment is online at: http://41.208.61.234/uhtbin/cgisirsi/20111201122725/SIRSI/0/520/J-CCT37-11

Contact:

Morgan Courtenay, attorney at CALS: morgan.courtenay@wits.ac.za / 083 566 1351

Teboho Mosikili, attorney at SERI: teboho@seri-sa.org / 072 248 2199 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 072 248 2199

Criminalising the Livelihoods of the Poor: The impact of formalising informal trading on female and migrant traders in Durban

http://www.seri-sa.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=17:research-reports&catid=9&Itemid=29

Criminalising the Livelihoods of the Poor: The impact of formalising informal trading on female and migrant traders in Durban

by Blessing Karumbidza (February 2011)

This research report investigates the impact of formalisation of informal trading in Durban, South Africa on informal traders – in particular women and foreign traders – and provides some recommendations for policy-makers, city officials and traders. For queries on the report or for hard copies, please contact blessing@seri-sa.org

Click here to download this report in pdf.