Category Archives: The New Age

The New Age: Protests promised over arrest

http://www.thenewage.co.za/54451-1010-53-Protests_promised_over_arrest

Protests promised over arrest

Dudu Dube

The Democratic Left Front, Abahlali Basemjondolo and the Unemployed People’s Movement, have promised a massive protest outside the Umlazi Magistrate’s Court when activist Bheki Buthelezi appears today.

“We are planning to occupy the ward councillor’s office while we demand these charges be dropped,” said Abahlali’s Mnikelo Ndabankulu.

The three organisations spent Saturday protesting outside the Umlazi police station after Buthelezi was arrested for intimidation. The charge of intimidation was laid against him by ward councillor Nomzamo Mkhize, who he has been at loggerheads with about community development programmes.

Buthelezi is a community leader in Ward 88 at Umlazi, a community that has been pestering the local municipality, demanding they be allocated land to start gardens and other community development projects.

Two weeks ago Buthelezi led the Ward 88 residents through Umlazi’s streets in an illegal march against unemployment.

On Saturday afternoon, Buthelezi was granted R500 ba

The New Age: 25 shacks burnt to the ground

http://www.thenewage.co.za/49240-1010-53-25_shacks_burnt_to_the_ground

25 shacks burnt to the ground

Chris Makhaye

As the cold front engulfed many parts of KwaZulu-Natal, 25 shacks were razed to the ground after they caught fire yesterday morning.

In Janata Road, near Springfield, a three-year-old child went missing and one woman was seriously injured in yesterday’s inferno.

Emergency workers were busy for most of the day as they tried to put out the fire before it spread to other shacks. The cause of the fire is believed to be a primus stove which was left burning in a shack.

The fire is the latest in a series of recent infernos in informal settlements around Durban. Just two weeks ago 350 shacks burnt down in the sprawling Kennedy Road informal settlement, northwest of Durban.

The cause of that fire was said to be a paraffin stove left burning in a house while the owners were out.

The human settlements department says building material, worth R1,7m, has been made available to residents to rebuild their homes, but many local residents had not yet rebuilt their lives.

The Abahlali baseMjondolo Shack Dwellers Association warned shack dwellers to be careful when they light fires during winter as these infernos can be caused by a single individual, but end up affecting the whole community.

Spokesperson S’bu Zikode said many residents along Durban’s Kennedy Road informal settlement are still battling to rebuild their shelters after a blaze ripped through the area earlier this month.

”Every time there is a disaster the authorities promise big things. But once the media is gone they go back to their arrogant selves. “In Kennedy Road they promised R1.7m to build people’s houses.

Where is that money now that winter is upon us?” he said.

New Age: Stepped up security irks protesters

http://www.thenewage.co.za/35953-1008-53-Stepped_up_security_irks_protesters

Stepped up security irks protesters

People visiting Cape Town’s Civic Centre without proof of appointments were furious when they were prevented from entering the area by security guards.

From early morning, visitors were turned away as a result of an illegal protest staged by 15 leaders of informal settlements and backyarders across Cape Town.

The rainy and windy weather would not stop Tafelsig Backyarders Association, Abahlali BaseMjondolo, Mitchells Plain Backyarders, Kensington Backyarders Association and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign from gathering outside the Civic Centre yesterday.

There was a heavy security presence with guards and Metro police officials making sure no-one entered the building.

The 15 people who attended, contrary to the numbers expected by the city and the media, made their presence felt as onlookers stopped for a glimpse of what was happening.

The 15 leaders carrying placards formed a line and blocked motorists from passing through Hertzog Boulevard, though some motorists forced their way through. According to the organisers, the protests follow a number of attempts to secure an open public meeting with the mayor, Patricia de Lille.

Mzonke Poni, coordinator for Abahlali BaseMjondolo said his organisation had in the past asked the mayor to address public meetings about issues that affect informal settlements and backyarders such as floods, shack fires, water cutoffs and the role of law enforcement.

He said yesterday’s protest was one of a number of protests they would embark on until De Lille addresses issues affecting them.

“Should the mayor fail to meet with us then we will be left with no option but to go back to our members and communities,” he said, adding that the only way forward was to make Cape Town’s informal settlements ungovernable.

He said today they would be protesting outside the human settlement department and tomorrow outside Premier Helen Zille’s office.

Charles Abrahams, from Mitchells Plain Backyarders Association, said De Lille “failed to respond to memorandums submitted previously and should she not respond to our demands we will be left we no choice but to make the city ungovernable.

“Anything will be possible and might have a huge economic impact,” said Abrahams.

Lwandiso Stofile, from De Lille’s office, said if the community wanted to engage with De Lille they were free to do so, but they needed to follow the right channels and procedures. “It is not going to help if we continue the way we do, because we have always opened the door for engagements,” said Stofile. – WCN

The New Age: Gugulethu backyarders left out in the cold

http://www.thenewage.co.za/28081-1011-53-Gugulethu_backyarders_left_out_in_the_cold

Gugulethu backyarders left out in the cold

A group of Gugulethu backyarders are fuming after human settlement MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela failed to meet them on Sunday to iron out allegations of corruption in an Eersterivier housing project.

Madikizela had agreed to a meeting with 52 backyarders who were part of an initial group of 300 backyarders who in 2001 started pooling their savings in order to obtain houses in a People’s Housing Project.

Initially calling themselves the Gugulethu RDP Housing Project, they appointed Pumla Dlokolo as their chairperson and approached the provincial housing department with their savings in 2006.

Dlokolo had told them that R2500 was required for a two-room house, and up to R5000 for a larger house.

Upon their submission to the housing department, then under MEC Richard Dyantyi, ervens were obtained in Eerste Rivier and an 821-unit housing project, named the Our Pride Housing Project, was given the go-ahead; the first phase was completed at the end of last year.

However, 52 of the original 300 Gugulethu backyarders have still not received houses.

It has emerged that the housing department never required money from beneficiaries to be paid over.

When enquiries were made a month ago, Madikizela’s spokesperson, Bruce Oom, said all beneficiaries were expected to contribute was “sweat equity”, meaning they should play a part in the building of their houses.

He said no money had been received from Dlokolo. The 52, who now call themselves the Gugulethu Concerned Backyarders, claim Dlokolo kicked them out of the project, but had never returned their money.

Nocekisani Phangalele, 43, said she was kicked out of the project by Dlokolo a “few months” before the handing over of houses in December last year.

The backyarders claim Dlokolo has also replaced their names on the beneficiary list with those of friends and family who are now living in the Our Pride Housing Project, and is selling vacant houses and renting out others for R1000 a month.

Dlokolo has admitted that seven of her family have benefited from the housing project, but said they had applied “just like everyone else”. Asked why the 52 backyarders were not on the beneficiary list, she said “they were expelled from the project because they failed to adhere to the constitution of the organisation,” adding: “We pleaded with them many times and then we decided to expel them.”

A month ago, Dlokolo said she was paying money back to the backyarders and “most of them have received their money”.

However, on Sunday the backyarders said they had not received a cent from Dlokolo. “I have not received any money from Pumla,” said backyarder Malusi Msesi.

Yesterday Dlokolo said that she was reimbursing backyarders.

“People are claiming their money and it is given to them. The procedure is that people must bring their deposit slips for proof that they have been paying before money can be transferred back to their account.”

Meanwhile, the group strongly criticised Madikizela for contacting them “at the last minute” to tell them he would not meet with them.

“They are doing this deliberately to provoke us,” said Msesi.

“This is not the first time they have not attended to our meeting although they have promised to come. We are not satisfied the way Madikizela is handling us.”

Oom said “our team” offered to invite the relevant project manager and a contractor’s representative to “help bring clarity to the housing issue”.

However, he said the officials were “unfortunately” not available and this was communicated to the Gugulethu backyarders before the weekend.

“At no stage was minister Madikizela committed to attend or scheduled to attend the meeting,” said Oom.

But he stressed that the department remained committed to engaging with the Gugulethu group to find solutions to their housing needs. – West Cape News

The New Age: An Upside Down World

http://thenewage.co.za/blogdetail.aspx?mid=186&blog_id=1025

An Upside Down World

Jared Sacks

“We live in a world turned on its head – a desolate, de-souled world that practices the superstitious worship of machines and the idolatry of arms – an upside-down world, with its left on its right, its belly button on its backside and its head where its feet should be.

It’s a world where children work and don’t play, where “development” makes people poorer, where cars are in streets where people should be, where a tiny minority of the world consumes a majority of its resources.

“If the world is upside-down the way it is now, wouldn’t we have to turn it over to get it to stand up straight?” – Eduardo Galeano.

Celebrated Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano would surely also agree that there is something upside-down about the way freedom of speech is meted out in our society.

In South Africa, anyone can say anything she or he likes. We are “free”. We have the right to freedom of speech, or so says our Constitution. ANCYL leader Julius Malema can mouth off all he wants about nationalisation while standing to benefit from it and DA leader Helen Zille can falsely claim that there is no more raw sewage on Cape Town’s streets.

We are free to listen to the views of the elites, non-stop. From Generations to Tutu to Zapiro. Sometimes, what is said is also a damn accurate description of how f****d up our world is today.

Yet, there is something wrong with even the most well-meaning voices that we listen to, read, or watch, in the media today. It’s not necessarily that they are wrong, but that these voices are upside down.

These voices are vetted, compartmentalised and sold for an industrial complex that has one bottom line: profit (and not just any profit, but profit without risk).

There is an inequality of communications that rivals the inequality of wealth in this country. We hear politicians, academics, and development professionals talk about a poverty that they have, with few exceptions, never even experienced. Yet, where are the voices of those actually living in this poverty? We listen to the likes of Malema (who has enough money to buy thousands of hectares of farm land) speak about land redistribution.

Yet where are the voices of the landless?

When Helen Zille installs a prepaid water meter in her own home in front of dozens of cameras, she claims that if it’s good enough for her, then it’s good enough for Cape Town’s poor. Yet, for those who are the forced recipients of such meters and who end up begging their neighbour once their water is cut, where are the cameras?

The poor and landless have learnt that they must burn tyres and destroy roads to bring the cameras!

Yes. Something is surely amiss. Something is definitively upside-down. I ask myself: why am I writing this piece when I’m not even the author of the book I am writing about here? What was my role, really?

I created space for an anthology to be published, when such space should have, in the first place, existed! My role should not exist.

This is why we must all work to turn things right-side up. Self-written histories such as No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way cannot be the only one of its kind in post-1994 South Africa.

The struggle for a true people’s history cannot end with the co-option of United Democratic Front-affiliated civil society, thereby making it the government’s history.

Has there really been much change in the South African media since the ANC came to power? Voice was and still is the property of the corporation.

Perhaps the only difference nowadays is that the voices of poor black shack dwellers, instead of being ignored outright, are sometimes interviewed, analysed, and interpreted.

But they’re always interviewed from a certain viewpoint, always analysed with specific agendas, always interpreted via specialised misinterpretations.

So when Conway tells us to “put your shoes into my shoes and wear me like a human being”, we’d better do as we’re told.

When Mina says: “I am not stupid, you can rather kill me but I will never agree to something that I am not satisfied with”, we should not underestimate her resolve.

And when Jacqui writes “turn your ear to the poor, hear them cry”, we must know that she has something important to say.

We cannot humanise our world through a vanguard media – as comradely as it may seemingly investigate society’s lack of humanity. To me, this is the ultimate lesson given by the 45 pavement dwellers who wrote this anthology.

Through Galeano again, we find that:

When it is genuine, when it is born of the need to speak, no one can stop the human voice. When denied a mouth, it speaks with the hands or the eyes, or the pores, or anything at all. Because every single one of us has something to say to others – something that deserves to be celebrated or forgiven by others.

And this is true in our case too. Our world and the media industry that speaks for it, has shrunk the pavement dweller’s voice into a small, though beautiful, 160-page book.

Yet, we must not forget that they spoke in myriad other ways: through their occupations, their protests and, of course, their unique little commune called Symphony Way that they built as they spent 21 months on an asphalt pavement opposite their N2 Gateway dream homes.

This article is appearing in the catalogue of the 2011 Jozi Book Fair. Jared Sacks is the compiler and supporting editor of No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way, and the executive director of Children of South Africa