Category Archives: The Star

The Star: Clergy pray for Kennedy Road murder accused

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=15&art_id=nw20091118184500946C943453

Clergy pray for Kennedy Road murder accused

November 18 2009 at 06:57PM

By Kamini Padayachee

Clergy from the Diakonia Council of Churches gathered outside the Durban Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday to pray for 13 people charged with killing two men at the Kennedy Road informal settlement in Sydenham, Durban.

The council has come out in support of the 13 men, claiming that police had falsely arrested the members of shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo.

In a statement released on Tuesday, Anglican Bishop Rubin Phillip said the police had arrested victims of violence at the settlement, instead of the perpetrators.

“The militia that have driven the Abahlali baseMjondolo leaders and hundreds of families out of the settlement is a profound disgrace to our democracy. The fact that the police have systematically failed to act against this militia, while instead arresting the victims of their violence and destruction, is cause for the gravest concern.”

The men are charged with two counts each of murder, attempted murder, robbery with aggravating circumstances and assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm, and additional charges of public violence and malicious damage to property in connection with a September 26 attack at the settlement, in which two people were killed.

The men have all applied for bail, which Magistrate B Mbulawa would rule on later this month.

The Star: Rich Tokyo spends night among poor

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=6&art_id=vn20090804031925973C101871

Rich Tokyo spends night among poor
Xolani Mbanjwa
August 04 2009 at 05:48AM

Tokyo Sexwale, the Minister of Human Settlements and one of the country’s richest men, has spent the night in Diepsloot, north-west of Joburg.

Monday night’s experience was meant to acquaint Sexwale with the hardships faced by millions of South Africans living in informal settlements.

It marked the first of many visits Sexwale plans to make to informal settlements on a nationwide fact-finding mission to uncover the reasons behind the service delivery protests that rocked the country and to assess the massive backlog in housing.

Sexwale will visit Joe Slovo informal settlement and Khayelitsha in Cape Town on Thursday.

He will also visit settlements in Bloemfontein and Durban.

Sexwale’s choice of Diepsloot was in response to the violent protests that erupted two weeks ago when angry residents of the densely populated informal settlement – home to an estimated 150 000 people – torched a police vehicle, stoned cars and burnt tyres in the streets after being told they would be shifted to Adelaide, another settlement nearby.

Although many shack dwellers who met Sexwale on Monday told him they did not want to move to another area, he was adamant that they would have to relocate because their shacks were built on top of a “dangerous” water pipeline.

Sexwale – himself born in an informal settlement in Soweto – appealed to community leaders, including taxi associations, religious leaders and business owners, whom he met in Diepsloot on Monday to be patient with the government’s roll-out of low-cost houses and services.

He told community leaders he wanted to see people’s living conditions and talk to residents himself so that the government could come up with a better plan for housing.

The economic downturn, unemployment, migration from rural areas, corruption and fraud were among the reasons Sexwale gave as causing the proliferation of informal settlements.

“We are on a sincere listening campaign to have a proper discussion about the lives of the poor. I came here to sleep among them (shack dwellers) to experience how they live.”

o This article was originally published on page 7 of The Star on August 04, 2009

The Star: Cops warn of more arrests after shops looted

http://www.sundaytribune.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20090725062037924C708152

Cops warn of more arrests after shops looted
25 July 2009, 15:52

By Fiona Gounden

The leader of hundreds of people responsible for looting shops in Durban this week should not think “she has got away with it”, warned police, saying they are still conducting intense investigations to charge the rest of the group.

However, the members of the South African Unemployed Peoples’ Movement (SAUPM), which is based in Durban, claim they are not “afraid of police”, and one person who was involved in the looting of shops has opened a case of assault against a police officer.

SAUPM leader Nozipho Mteshane yesterday warned that their “demonstrations are far from over”, and intense meetings were under way to “discuss their next plan of action in the city”.

The looters invaded supermarkets in Durban’s city centre on Wednesday, stealing and eating food from the stores.

About 100 members were arrested after branches of Shoprite and Pick n Pay were looted during a protest march in support of grants of R1 500 for the unemployed.

However, KwaZulu-Natal Premier Zweli Mkhize said such grants were unaffordable and distributing it to people would bankrupt the government.

Onlookers at the Shoprite store on Dr Pixley KaSeme (West) Street said members of the group ate chips, roasted chicken and other goods inside the store and loaded trolleys to take with them.

At the same time, another group raided the Pick n Pay store in the Workshop shopping centre.

A total of 90 of the arrested looters appeared in the Durban Magistrate’s Court on theft charges on Thursday. They were released on warning and told to appear in court again on August 28.

Yesterday, SAPS spokesperson Superintendent Vincent Mdunge said there were many more guilty parties out there besides the ones already arrested.

“Our investigations are still under way and we will be finding many other offenders who will be identified by questioning witnesses as well as by CCTV footage.”

* This article was originally published on page 5 of The Star on July 25, 2009

The Star: Violent protests amid claims of land grab

http://www.thestar.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=vn20090722235931853C208309

Violent protests amid claims of land grab
23 July 2009, 06:19
Fiery and violent protests have left scores hospitalised amid allegations of Zimbabwe war vets-style land grabs taking place.

A community have also been dumped in the veld surrounded by their meagre belongings.

More than 20 people were injured and at least 20 arrested when residents of Pielie’s Farm near Meyerton, 20km south of Joburg, protested along the R59 highway between Joburg and Vereeniging yesterday.

Heavily armed police finally dispersed the crowd, who fled into the informal settlement about 400m from the highway.

While shots rang out around them, a group of about 30 women and children took shelter in the local church, where they’ve been given refuge from the bitter Highveld winter.

“I’m just trying to protect what I have. There’s nowhere for us to go,” said Maria Dywili, huddling in the church with her two children.

On Tuesday, about 250 people, some of them claiming to be MK war veterans, attempted to invade Pielie’s Farm, said Midvaal mayor Timothy Nast.

“We immediately alerted the Red Ants to remove the illegal structures from the farm, which lies next to the new multimillion-rand Heineken brewery,” said the mayor.

He said the illegal invaders’ actions were supported by the Sedibeng District Municipality, which provided container homes. When the local council tried to intervene by deploying the Red Ants, they were stopped by the police.

“This is a sad day for South Africa as there is now proof that the ANC is using the same tactics as Robert Mugabe and Zanu-PF did in Zimbabwe. Clearly, property rights in our country are no longer guaranteed,” said Nast.

When The Star arrived at the scene of the protest action yesterday morning, a line of police backed up by two Nyala armoured vehicles chased a group of 300 protesters into the Pielie’s Farm settlement.

As they went after the protesters into the maze of shacks, they fired at point-blank range at anybody lingering outside.

Residents of Pielie’s Farm said the protest came after 20 families were evicted by the Red Ants from Beers Farm, 5km up the road, a month ago.

The families were moved to another ward but were chased away by local residents who accused them of being there to steal their houses. The families were dumped at Pielie’s Farm last week.

At the site of where the residents of Beers Farm used to live, in an area called Settlement Valley, the ground is littered with rubble.

Two tattered couches have been pushed together and a metal sheet placed on top to provide a makeshift shelter for a bitch that recently gave birth to two pups. A plastic drum half filled with water, shattered TVs and radios, and shards from ceramic vases bore testimony to the unexpected removals.

Pieces of asbestos protruding from the ground, a red school jersey, and a clothesline bore witness to a home that once stood here.

Fana Magalimele, 29, wandered through the remains of the place where he has lived his entire life. He grew up in the farmworkers’ quarters and later built his own asbestos-sheet shack.

“I was at work when I got the call that they were demolishing our homes,” Magalimele said.

Nast said the council had tried to get the 20 families separated from the rest of the illegal invaders in order to provide them with temporary accommodation. Instead, they were being used as bargaining chips by the larger group, led by war vets, to demand housing on Pielie’s Farm, he said.

Meanwhile, people from Beers Farm have been sleeping in the veld, left to guard their meagre belongings.

“If we hadn’t done this, we would not have got the attention of the media, the mayor, the premier or even the president,” said Xabiso Sifingo, 25.

* This article was originally published on page 3 of The Star on July 23, 2009

The Star: Residents blocking R59 nabbed

http://www.thestar.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=nw20090722100936156C937701

Residents blocking R59 nabbed
22 July 2009, 10:10
By Beauregard Tromp

At least 20 people were injured and 20 others arrested on Tuesday morning when residents of Pielie’s Farm in Meyerton, 20km south of Joburg, erected barricades on the R59 highway and pelted passing motorists with stones.

Residents of the informal settlement hid behind shacks flimsy corrugated the cover of as police in full riot gear, armed with shotguns and backed by two Nyalas, went in to the settlement, seeking out those involved in the protest action.

About 30 police officers chased the residents. The residents were chased from the highway by about 30 police officers across the open veld into the informal settlement. As they went after police chased the protesters into the maze of shacks, they fired at point-blank range at anybody lingering outside the dwellings.

Earlier, a group of about 300 residents of the settlement had blocked off the highway in both directions, affecting traffic to and from Vereeniging.

This came after The action came about after a group of 20 families were evicted by the Red Ants from Beers Farm, 5km up the road, a month ago. The families were initially moved to another ward, where they were chased away by local residents who accused them of coming to steal their houses. The families were dumped at Pielie’s Farm were there’s an established informal settlement last week.