Category Archives: Tokyo Sexwale

Minister of Human Settlements misunderstands the Constitution and social justice struggles

PRESS STATEMENT

(Johannesburg, 2 December 2010)

Minister of Human Settlements misunderstands the Constitution and social justice struggles

Over the past year, the Minister of Human Settlements, Tokyo Sexwale, has been praised for his energy in tackling the housing crisis. He recently signed service delivery agreements with his nine MECS for Outcome 8 of the presidential outcomes – sustainable human settlements and improved quality of household life – and he has been very vocal on what actions will accompany these agreements, as well as the challenges faced by his department. However, some of the Minister’s recent statements (see below) point to a lack of understanding of the reasons for the emergence and existence of informal settlements and illegally occupied inner city buildings. Further, his statements about the legal framework and recent court cases show a disregard for the role of the courts in enforcing the obligations imposed by the Constitution on the state, and in advancing struggles for fundamental rights in a constitutional democracy.

The Minister has repeatedly referred to the “worrying trend” of the “legalisation of illegality” entrenched by recent court rulings. He claims these rulings have severe budgetary implications for government’s housing plans. He asserts that the rise in the number of informal settlements in the country is largely as a result of “powerful court rulings in favour of illegal settlers.” On a number of occasions, he has referred to the Blue Moonlight case in which the South Gauteng High Court ordered that the City of Johannesburg pay the rent of occupiers facing eviction from a privately-owned building in the inner city. While this order may not be without problems, and appropriately therefore all of the parties are currently appealing various aspects of the order in the SCA, the Minister’s approach, by contrast, implies an attack on the judiciary itself.

What the Minister apparently fails to recognise is that for millions of poor citizens (and non-citizens), informal settlements and inner city buildings are the only forms of accommodation available in the city or close to it. These forms of housing have two very important factors that state housing developments have often failed to provide – closer location to employment opportunities and affordability. The proliferation of these forms of informal housing has little to do with court judgments, and everything to do with the failures of the state at all levels to provide affordable public rental housing for poor people in cities, and to upgrade informal settlements in situ, close to jobs and socio-economic infrastructure.

Demolishing shacks in informal settlements and confiscating building materials is not the answer. While there is a need to deal with the illegal and abusive practices of those who hijack buildings and other slumlords, evicting poor tenants, who have no alternative from living in allegedly hijacked inner city buildings, does not address the problem either. Poor people will continue to move to urban centres in search of jobs, whether or not courts defend their rights. It would be better if the government acknowledged this reality and saw this as an opportunity for economic development and growth, which would be part of its development of an appropriate urban housing framework.

The migration of people to cities is a world-wide phenomenon that cannot be rolled back by denying them access to housing. Further, the South African government’s poor handling of migrants/refugees/asylum seekers in South Africa, particularly Zimbabweans, is directly linked to the insatiable demand for accommodation in inner cities, particularly in Johannesburg. Failure to make these linkages, evident in the heavy-handed approach to foreigners that the state has adopted, has devastating consequences.

The National Treasury has highlighted that “deliberate efforts to open access to lower income groups in inner cities and in economically active areas are required to avoid locating poor people in peripheries.” Furthermore, according to the government-mandated Social Housing Foundation (SHF):

the location and density of affordable housing makes a significant difference to the overall costs and benefits of housing to South African society over time and that housing that is well-located in urban centres, even though it financially costs much more to build, (due to higher land prices) actually has more benefits for society and costs less over time than does much cheaper housing on the periphery.

The reality is that most social housing projects (that the Minister has been promoting) cater predominantly for households earning between R3 500 and R7 500 a month, with a small percentage catering for the bottom end of the market. Yet the vast majority of households in South Africa – approximately 85.6 percent – earn R3 200 or less per month. Therefore, this leaves a huge shortfall in formally accessible housing stock.

The state bears the ultimate burden and is constitutionally obliged to act to fulfil the right to housing. Of course, it cannot do so overnight. For this very reason, the law recognises that many people will have to remain in informal — and often unlawful, though legally protected — accommodation until the state is able to assist them. In this sense, the Minister is correct. What would normally be unlawful is made lawful for so long as the alternative would be homelessness, which in any democracy – particularly a middle income country like South Africa – is a far worse harm.

The Minister’s assertions that courts and legislation are preventing ‘development’, and encouraging people to remain in sub-standard accommodation, are incorrect. The real problem lies in the failure to provide decent, affordable accommodation for the poor in cities.

Further, Minister Sexwale’s focus on court judgments includes an implicit attack on the rule of law, the independence of the judiciary and its mandate to enforce all constitutional rights and the obligations they impose on the state. Instead of seeking ways in which to discharge his constitutional obligations, the Minister seeks to assign blame to that part of our constitutional state – the judiciary – that is attempting seriously to fulfil its constitutional mandate. He is not alone in this. Recent statements by Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Jeff Radebe, and deputy Minister of Transport, Jeremy Cronin, are in much the same vein.

Poor people, lawyers, courts and judges are not the enemy. Where government acts lawfully in advancing the rights of the poor, the courts have no role. But there are flaws in state housing policy and implementation. Rather than the denialism of the past, we need to engage in order to strengthen democracy, security and stability.

As NGOs that represent poor clients and use the law – and sometimes litigation – to protect and promote human rights, we urge the Minister to engage with those involved in fighting for human rights, particularly in relation to access to housing and basic services. The Minister’s statements highlight the fact that he does not understand the Constitution or value the constitutionally mandated role of civil society and the courts in advancing rights and equality.

Endorsed by (in alphabetical order):

Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS)

Community Law Centre (CLC)

Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR)

Legal Resources Centre (LRC)

SECTION27 (incorporating the AIDS Law Project)

Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI)

Plakkery neem met 1000% toe sedert 1994

http://www.volksblad.com/Suid-Afrika/Nuus/Plakkery-neem-met-1000-toe-sedert-1994-20101125

Plakkery neem met 1000% toe sedert 1994

Lizel Steenkamp

KAAPSTAD. – Plakkerskampe het sedert 1994 met meer as 1000% toegeneem, grootliks omdat die howe in grondbesetters se guns beslis, het mnr. Tokyo Sexwale, minister van huisvesting, gister in die parlement gesê.

Daar is nou sowat 2700 plakkerskampe landwyd. Terselfdertyd word al hoe meer geboue in stedelike sakekerns beset.

Sexwale het spesifiek verwys na die “plundering van voorkeurgrond” waarop “plakkershutte, krotbuurte en ghetto’s” verrys. Die regering word dan gedwing om ten duurste basiese dienste te lewer waarvoor nooit beplan is nie.

Hy het aan die portefeuljekomitee oor huisvesting gesê die “gety van mense wat na stede stroom en grond gryp”, gaan moeilik gestuit word, omdat die howe die afgelope jare ’n “presedentereg” geskep het waar “uitspraak ná uitspraak” die besetters bevoordeel.

Hy het ’n ernstige beroep op howe gedoen om te besin en ook die parlement versoek om ondersoek daarna in te stel.

“Die vreesaanjaendste voorbeeld is die Johannesburgse metroraad wat huurgeld moet betaal aan die eienaars van geboue wat deur mense in die stad beset is.

“Hulle stroom na die stede, hulle plak 48 uur lank en dan moet ons dienste voorsien of ons nou wil of nie. En hulle hou aan om dit te doen, want daar is kragtige hofbevele in hul guns.”

Volgens Sexwale is wetgewing oor uitsettings en die besetting van grond bedoel om armes, wat geslagte lank op grond woon, teen uitsetting te beskerm. “Dis nie veronderstel om sindikate en mense wat op jou werf plak, te beskerm nie.”

Hy het mnr. Nathi Mthethwa, minister van polisie, en genl. Bheki Cele, nasionale polisiehoof, geprys vir hul spoedige optrede teen besetters in die Johannesburgse middestad waar 80 geboue onlangs “bevry” is. Een só ’n gebou in Endstraat word nou opgeknap en sal teen Junie verblyf aan sowat 900 gesinne kan bied.

Dit het voorts aan die lig gekom reuse-huisvestingprojekte word vertraag weens ’n gebrek aan infrastruktuur soos damme, rioolsuiweringsaanlegte, stormwaterstelsels, kraglyne vir elektrisiteitsvoorsiening en pypleidings vir watervoorsiening.

Die infrastruktuur word egter nie deur die departement van huisvesting opgerig nie en vereis ’n geïntegreerde aanslag van ’n groep staatsdepartemente.

Volgens Sexwale moet huisvestingsprojekte op dieselfde wyse as infrastruktuur-ontwikkeling vir die afgelope Wêreldbeker-sokkertoernooi bestuur word.

“Daar was geen probleem om paaie, water, krag en sanitasie aan die stadions te voorsien nie, want al die beplanning het om een tafel gebeur.”

Dream of true freedom lies smouldering in the grave

http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=444770

2010/10/29

Dream of true freedom lies smouldering in the grave

INSIGHT – Nomboniso Gasa

“THE democratic genie has been let out of the bottle” pronounced Neil Coleman, of Cosatu in the heady days after the election of President Jacob Zuma and his government.

It was a government described as open, accessible, people friendly and pro-poor.

Coleman is not only a decent man. He is also a man of principle.

There was no rancour, populism or triumphalism in his words. His was a deep yearning to see our democracy maturing.

So what has happened to the democratic genie?

Today, images and messages are everywhere, they give us a glimpse of what lies ahead. Slowly and systematically our hard won freedom is being limited. The stranglehold is political, economic and geographic.

In Makhaza township in the Western Cape, the DA gave the poor its Hobson’s Choice – open toilets or continues the bucket system. “The choice is yours.”

This of course, was not about a provincial government that was willing to explore options with the citizens in the light of financial constraints. No, it was an open and direct display of contempt for the poor.

The DA is not alone in its contempt for the poor. In Bizana, Eastern Cape, people were forcibly removed from the “squalor” in which they lived, their shacks mowed down in an action reminiscent of the apartheid era. Yet some of the hands and brains behind the bulldozers this time were those of comrades with whom some of the community had once shared battle trenches.

For some, these were their sons and daughters, metaphorically and literally.

These shacks probably took a long time to put together. Squalid as they seemed, they were the only homes the people of this community had. The people were given no alternative accommodation as the law requires.

Municipal councils flout the very laws they are supposed to uphold and enforce. They do so unabashed because they know crimes against the poor are crimes for which they will not be held accountable or risk losing their jobs. Why should they?

The minister of human settlement, in a fit of populism, knocked on someone’s door and spent a night there, while the owner went to sleep with the neighbours. She hoped this unwanted intrusion was a small price to pay for the change that would be brought once the minister had “experienced” sleeping in the shack.

Well, things did not turn out that way. As soon as the cameras stopped clicking and ink of journalists had dried, Tokyo Sexwale promptly forgot about the tourist experience in the shack. It was only when people claimed their agency and began to protest and reminded the one- time, one-night visitor of their existence that the minister went back.

He partly remembered his word.

This is an era of short term mass appeal – camera, lights and action.

Even the President took time to help someone settle in a better home. We saw him unpacking the refrigerator, lounge suite, microwave and all, including, I hope electric vouchers.

The government with a human heart was in full swing.

Now, the other day, Sexwale described informal settlements as ugly eyesores and this was not for the first time. People live there wena, we muttered accusingly at the television screens, shaking our heads with embarrassment.

Why do people live in these conditions, we asked angrily pointing at the screen.

Look at what has become of this democratic genie.

Now, if the promise of the President to the National House of Traditional Leaders is realised, by December 2010 South Africa will have a dual legal system. The areas that were formally marked as “homelands” on the map before 1994 will be rezoned as “traditional communities”.

The Traditional Courts Bill is no Mickey Mouse law. We are Africans, are we not? In the name of restoring our cultural dignity and honouring the wise ways of our forebears, “traditional” leaders will decide on economic development and even hear criminal cases and disputes and much more. For the subjects in traditional communities, the magistrates’ courts will not be courts of first instance.

Reading the draft Traditional Courts Bill the question arises, why should people in these communities vote in the forthcoming local government elections? The municipal and local government system has nothing to do with these communities. There leadership and governance are predetermined. So, what will they be voting for?

Everywhere, we see images of a troubled land and its people. The dream lies smouldering in the grave, says the poet.

The gap between grandiloquent statements, cameo appearances amid the drama of poor people’s lives and the real lived experiences of a world shrunken by poverty and the indifference of the powerful is becoming wider by day.

Freedom will only have any real meaning if citizens claim it for themselves. This requires careful and deliberate building of a promised nation. Freedom is earned every day. Only then, shall we find that democratic genie which we will have to continually protect.

Nomboniso Gasa is a researcher, writer and columnist on gender, politics and cultural issues

Second Mandela Park Back Yarders Letter to Tokyo Sexwale

http://mpbackyarders.org.za/2010/10/22/dear-honourable-minister-tokyo-sexwale-re-second-letter-on-mandela-park-housing-crisis/#more-318

Dear Honourable Minister Tokyo Sexwale

Re: Second letter on Mandela Park housing crisis

Dear Honourable Minister Tokyo Sexwale,
cc’ Deputy Minister Zoliswa Kota-Fredericks
cc’ Chairperson Beauty Dambuza in the National Assembly
cc’ DHS Director General
cc’ DHS Anti-Fraud & Anti-Corruption Unit

TO THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF NATIONAL HUMAN SETTLEMENT MR. TOKYO SEXWALE

DEAR SIR:
RE: MANDELA PARK HOUSES MATTER

Subsequent to our letter received by your office on Tuesday 12 Oct 2010.

We have not heard from your office since the above letter
The issue is becoming very hot and needs your urgent attention
We further question the credibility of the reports you get from theMEC of Human Settlement in the Western Cape Province
We regret to inform you that as Mandela Park Back-Yarders inKhayelitsha Western Cape, we are going to continue defending ourpercentage from housing projects that become known to us in our area.

On the 21 Oct 2010 we have found hooligans sent by the councilor Mr.Rider Mkhutswana of ward 97 to come and disrupt the building of the houses in the area.

Evident to this one minor that we caught in action during the disruption by the name of Lindelwa Chanyana confirmed that Mr.Mkhutswana advised them act as such.

At first she was reluctant to tell us about who sent them but,eventual she confirmed that they were sent by the councilor and thathe emphasised that his name must not be mentioned.
She further informed us that at a particular meeting Mr. Mkhutswana told them that houses being built in Mandela Park are for Town Two Back-yarders.

As Mandela Park Back-Yarders we know for a fact that Town Two Back-Yarders are not beneficiaries to this project. We know that the MEC for Human Settlement in the Western Cape is also involved in this project disruption.

He had been telling lies in the media i.e Radio Zibonela/ KFM e.t.c that he is in constant consultation with Mandela Park Back-Yarders asthey are close in reaching consensus. Further he would went on to paint a picture that the Mandela Park Back-Yarders are the one who are against the development in projects.

NB= this is the second correspondence to your office from the frustrated community, a frustration that is caused by the people wehave entrusted to deliver service to us. We once again call upon you Honourable Minister/ CDE to act as a matter of extreme urgent to our cry. This is in avoidance of any unforeseen circumstances that we foreseebecoming.

Therefore as Mandela Park we are going to fight for our percentage until we are blue in our face.

For further information contact: Khaya on- 0780241683 or Mlungisi on-0786659061

Mandela Park Backyarders: Open Letter to Tokyo Sexwale

http://mpbackyarders.org.za/2010/10/11/298/

Open Letter to Tokyo Sexwale

Dear Honourable Minister Tokyo Sexwale,
cc’ Deputy Minister Zoliswa Kota-Fredericks
cc’ Chairperson Beauty Dambuza in the National Assembly
cc’ DHS Director General
cc’ DHS Anti-Fraud & Anti-Corruption Unit

As Mandela Park Backyarders and residents living in Khayelitsha near Cape Town we have decided to skip the rhetoric, and direct our message to you as the National Head for the Human Settlements.

Our direct message to you is the result of being consistently ignored by the Western Cape Minister of Human Settlements Bonginkosi Madikizela.

The housing situation in Mandela Park has been volatile for a very long time and now we call on you as the head of the DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS to come and engage with the M-Park residents on a range of issues that mostly pertain to housing as well as service delivery in General. The urgency of the matter is such that if collective action from leadership (both local and national) and relevant stakeholders is not taken, we could find this situation escalating to more drastic levels through protest and further civil disobedience. These actions, as you know, will often lead to people being attached and injured by police and arrested – which means opening the community to unnecessary criminal charges and animosity (yes another Hangberg).

Our demands are as follows:

* 50% of the current and future construction in Mandela Park to benefit backyarders in the community.

* Fast track the rental stock in the area to accommodate those individuals considered to be earning to much to qualify for RDP stock. Just because some of us are working does not mean we can afford expensive bond houses.

* Investigate further the rotten elements left by Thubelisha Homes in the area. The residents have proof that some of the staff that used to work for Thubelisha are renting out RDP houses to desperate individuals and families. We call upon you to follow this corruption to its core.

Our threats of protest is not always necessary if dialogue amongst people and leadership is honest and forward thinking.

Western Cape Minister for Human Settlement Bonginkosi Madikizela has acknowledged the complexities involving the Mandela Park Housing Crisis but he has failed to work with the community to address this issue. As residents, we simply have no trust that he will ever listen to us again as he is showing crocodile skin characteristics.

He is on a campaign to label himself an innocent by making disturbing statements on a public platform that in M-Park there are groupings that refuse to co-operate with his plans. He is often quoted in media saying he does consult regularly with M-Park leaders and residents including Backyarders to resolve issue and that the crisis doesn’t exist.

IN SIMPLE TERMS THESE ARE ‘BLUE LIES’ MULTIPLIED!!

A few days ago, Mr Madikizela even had the audacity to come to Mandela Park for a media photo-op at the insistence of an SABC2 report about one house that was invaded 12 years ago. Yet, while in Mandela Park, he refused to meet with the thousands of Backyarders who continue to demand his time.

Today we witness some ‘special’ communities being developed and serviced while residents of Mandela Park are deeply disillusioned. We feel that we have been deserted by those with whom we put our trust. All MEC’s that were elected since 1994 have been unable to resolve the housing problems in our community and there has been little effort from the national government’s side to intervene. There is not even one structure can the City can claim to have erected as part of the desired service delivery in the area since people started to move to M-Park in 1989.

Honourable Minister,. that you are well informed about M-Park struggles is no secret. We also believe that your department was established to find solution to our problem instead of recycling the lies we’ve been fed at the provincial level.

Hence the call for this engagement is urgent as the current construction of houses in the area is also proving to be mismanaged and corrupt. The development in Mandela Park is like a ship without its rudder – this can only end in increased anger in our community.

In an unfortunate circumstance of you not being available to meet with us personally, please ensure that an empowered representative from your office is availed to attend our weekly Sunday mass meetings.

For more information please contact: 0737662078 (Loyiso) or 0780241683 (Khaya)