Category Archives: The Anti-Privatisation Forum

APF Jo’burg Region Housing March on Friday 25th June

APF Johannesburg Region march on Friday 25th June to highlight the housing crisis in poor communities

The gathering point is at Johannesburg Library Gardens from 10h00. The march will start at 11h00 and will proceed to the Department of Housing on Sauer Street

(between Market and President Streets).

The APF Johannesburg Region invites all progressive community organisations, social movements, unions and other organs of civil society and individuals to join our march to highlight the ongoing and intensifying housing crisis in poor communities. Come join in the struggle to expose and turn back the neo-liberal policies that continue to impoverish the majority and make a small minority rich.

While billions are being made out of the present Soccer World Cup in South Africa, millions living in South Africa are falling ever-deeper into poverty. While additional billions have been, and continue to be, poured into building stadiums, urban highways and high-speed trains – infrastructure that will not directly benefit the poor – millions across the country still live in shacks and sub-standard housing far away from work places and other services. Thousands continue to be forcibly evicted and denied their rightful title deeds. Socio-economic inequality is reaching epidemic proportions.

Despite endless promises by national, provincial and local government, quality and affordable housing remains a pipe-dream for ever-increasing numbers of people. One of the main reasons for this is that government continues to rely on private banks and construction corporates as the main housing ‘delivery’ agent. To add insult to injury, where housing projects have been undertaken in poor communities, most have been completely abused and undermined by widespread corruption of public officials and ‘private’ tenderpreneurs. Besides the disappearing millions and the shoddy construction, there is also the illegal selling of people’s houses by these corrupt and venal criminals.

Without decent, affordable publicly provided housing, there can be no enjoyment of most basic services, no personal and community security, no human dignity. We will not stand idly by and accept this so-called ‘reality’. We want change and we want it now!

Phambili ngo mzabalazo we zindlu phambili

For more information contact:

Sibongile on 074 485 8127 or Ellen on 082 663 3133

APF: On the sentencing of the Kliptown 5

On the sentencing of the Kliptown 5

16th March 2009

On Friday, the Kliptown 5 were sentenced in the Protea Magistrates Court following their previous conviction on charges of “public violence”. Handing down very harsh sentences, the magistrate made her intent very clear: the defendants must be deterred from participating in any future protest action. Four of the five – comrades Charlie, Sibongile, Ricardo and Oscar – were sentenced to 2 years in prison, or a R3000 fine each, both suspended for 5 years. The fifth defendant, comrade Thabo, was sentenced to 2 years in prison suspended for 3 years or a R3000 fine (payable immediately). The APF immediately paid the fine for comrade Thabo.

The Anti Privatisation Forum and the Kliptown Concerned Residents are only too well aware that this kind of ‘justice’ is part of the state’s strategy to weaken our organisations and to debilitate us and all social movements and community organisations of the poor from engaging in legitimate protest actions. No doubt, the harsh sentences were specifically designed to have a chilling effect on any protest leading up to the April 22nd national elections. The suspended sentences are no harmless retreats from serving time in prison. If during the term of the suspended sentence the ‘offenders’ commit a “crime” – which could mean simply participating in a demonstration or falling foul of the dictates of some police officer – the maximum punishment of the R3000 fine as well as the 2 years in prison will be inflicted. These sentences are no less than the seizure of the basic rights of the Kliptown 5 (and all those they symbolically represent). The state’s message is loud and clear – suffer the indignity of poverty, take the beatings and go, quietly.

Justice?

It is absurd to even ask if justice was served. Protest against a lack of housing, bucket toilets and unfulfilled promises, get shot by police with ‘rubber’ bullets, and the chance of being sent to prison are even higher than for attempted murder or rape. Justice is not an ideal that the courts in South Africa aspire to. It bends to wealth and privilege and is a political tool of repression. There is no justice in South Africa if you are poor. By denying justice, the state is contracting the limits of formal channels of protest and stoking up the pressure of social discontent that will explode.

But lest those in positions of power and authority forget:

Struggle Continues!!

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For background to the events leading to the arrests of the Kliptown 5, click on this link to the APF website – http://www.apf.org.za/article.php3?id_article=298

For comment, please call Silumko Radebe on 0721737268.