Category Archives: Willies Mchunu

M&G: Leaderless community self-destructs

http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-10-12-leaderless-community-selfdestructs

Leaderless community self-destructs

Birds of prey hover over the Kennedy Road informal settlement in Durban. Swooping through the nauseatingly sweet air, perfumed to mask the stench of a landfill site just across the fence, they pick at the detritus below.

Mired in squalor on the periphery of society, communities like the estimated 8000 people who live here have long attracted predators: politicians, shacklords, academics, journalists, NGOs, tavern owners and others out to make a quick buck from human misery.

Even the rebuilding of homes after shack fires ­- eight have ravaged the settlement this year alone, the worst gutting 800 homes in July — has allegedly been corrupted.

Said resident Msawakhe Sangweni: “After the first few fires, the [eThekwini] municipality started building the amaTins (metal shacks) for people, but these things were too small for big families. We asked for the materials so we could rebuild ourselves. But the materials arrive and then go missing.”

Sangweni echoed community suspicion that the building materials, handed to a community policing forum (CPF) — seen to be aligned to the ANC ­- for distribution to residents, had been sold outside the community. “The committee says there is an investigation into this, but we don’t know anything,” he said.

Forum chairperson Jomo Gwala confirmed that an investigation was taking place, but would not comment further. The CPF was established in September last year after youth leaders of the shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo, were set upon by a mob chanting anti-Mpondo sentiments. It triggered a night of terror and violence that left two people, Nthokozisi Ndlovu and Ndumiso Mnguni, dead.

Abahlali leaders fled for their lives and into hiding, as did several hundred others. Abahlali alleged the attack was an attempt by the local ANC to disembowel the movement, one of the largest of its kind with more than 3 000 paid-up members and claiming many other informal followers in 25 communities in KwaZulu-Natal and others in the Western Cape.

Thirteen members of the Abahlali-aligned Kennedy Road Development Committee were arrested for the murders, with police alleging that they were behind the killings. One has since been acquitted after three months in jail, seven were released on bail in November last year and the remaining five in July this year. After several delays, the trial is expected to start in late November. The charges include two counts of murder, attempted murder and armed robbery.

Abahlali has called the investigation into the attacks “blatantly political” and the judicial process “distorted”. The movement’s call on government for an independent judicial inquiry into the attacks has fallen on deaf ears.

A year has passed since the attacks on the night of September 26 and the following morning. What happened that night remains as murky as the rivulets of water, turned a milky blue-grey by sewage and washing, that run through the settlement.

A few days after the violence, at a meeting called by KwaZulu-Natal safety and security minister Willies Mchunu, where he claimed that Kennedy Road had been “liberated” from Abahlali, the CPF was formed.

At the meeting the chairperson of the municipality’s housing committee, Nigel Gumede, said that Abahlali’s oppositional approach to the municipality had blocked development. Gumede promised the community electricity connections and housing in the new Cornubia development by February this year.

A year later electricity has not been installed and, Gumede said, the Cornubia development has yet to break ground. “There was no policy to reticulate electricity in informal settlements,” he said. “We have been working on that. And there is also the issue of shacks of low quality not being able to hold the electrical-ready boards.”

There are other changes at Kennedy Road. There are more amaTins. The drop-in centre and crèche run by the community no longer operates, and the hall, once a common resource for meetings, is dilapidated and home to refugees from the last fire.

Malodorous rubbish piles up because the community’s clean-up campaigns have ceased, whereas toilets installed months ago have not been cleaned. Some residents say they are uncertain about their future, because communication between them, the CPF and the municipality is nonexistent.

One resident who spoke anonymously to the Mail & Guardian said: “Whenever I go to the committee with a problem or to help with a proof of residency [to access social grants and identity documents], they say ‘I’m not the chairperson.’ And they tell me to go away.”

Gwala said representation for Kennedy Road was in chaos. “Ward 25 [where the settlement is situated] does not have a single ANC branch executive; that’s why things are mixed up. There are two branch executives, the old and the new. No one will be sure who is leading Kennedy Road until this is settled.”

On why the settlement could not vote in a non-ANC committee, as was the case previously, Gwala said: “If I have a problem, I’m supposed to report to the BEC [branch executive committee], who reports to the councillor’s office, who will take it to [Mayor Obed] Mlaba’s office. That is how it works.”

Zama Ndlovu (28) used to work at the drop-in centre, which cares for up to 50 children a day while “their parents went to work or to look for a job”.

After the death of her mother and aunt, Ndlovu’s job allowed her to support her own son, four-year-old Nhlaka, as well as a sister, a nephew and a cousin, all between eight and 15 years old. Since the attacks, she has worked intermittently.

Ndlovu, who is studying by correspondence for a diploma in human resource management, said: “When you finish matric and do tertiary [education], you feel like you have the world in the palm of your hand. Then you realise there are no jobs. Eventually in June I felt I had to be more adult because the people I’m responsible for can’t go to bed hungry, so I did domestic work for R45 a day. I never thought of myself as a domestic, but I’m the elder at home now.”

It was school holidays when the M&G visited Kennedy. Children wandered around the settlement. Ndlovu looked wistfully at her son and said: “There’s nothing for these children now. At the crèche there was a playground and things for them to do; we’d also give them a hot meal. Now people have started home crèches, but five children in a small shack is terrible for them. And it’s more expensive, R10 a day. We used to charge R20 a month and even then many couldn’t afford it.”

The lives of those arrested for the murders have also changed. Thokozane Mthwana, one of the “Kennedy Road 12”, gave his version of the night of terror: “I thought the police had come to save us from the mob, and I got into the van. But when we got to the station, they arrested us,” he said. Mthwana’s home and tuck shop, with all its stock, was looted and destroyed that night. Having previously worked as a security guard to support his three children and three nephews, he has been unable to find a job since. “I lost my job when I was arrested last year and now no one will hire me because of the case.”

Mthwana’s plight appears especially tragic. His mother, who helped support the six children he cared for with her pension, recently died.

He said his two-month stint in prison was “very difficult”. “You have to buy your life in prison. You need Boxer [tobacco] or something like that to buy life. Things happen to you that I can’t explain to you. Even to sleep at night, you need to buy it.”

With its Kennedy Road headquarters looted, Abahlali now operates out of a small office in downtown Durban. There, Sbu Zikode’s five-year-old son picked at a newspaper article with a black-and-white photo of Kennedy Road pasted on the wall. Their home has since been destroyed.

Zikode said the settlement has changed almost unrecognisably since the attacks. Looking dejected for a second, he said: “It’s only now we’re allowing ourselves to feel the effect of the attacks on our families. For a long time we were dealing with the attacks, people being displaced, the movement, trying to make sense of what happened. It’s only now that some things are starting to sink in.”

Abahlali itself appears to be at a watershed after five years of existence. Kennedy Road, its symbolic heart, has been wrenched away. There were tentative attempts to return and a Kennedy Road in Exile branch, with more than 100 members, was formed.

The movement continues to negotiate with the municipality over in situ upgrades in 14 informal settlements around Durban, including Kennedy Road. The impression remains that it still holds the view that “living politics” remains more important than the agendas of NGOs or funders.

There are now questions about whether it will go the route of other social movements, like the Anti-Privatisation Forum, whose support and voice seem to have ebbed away.

Open Letter to Willies Mchunu from the Witten Tenants Association

Click here to read other letters from other organisations.

Witten Tenants Association
Postfach 1928
D-58409 Witten
Germany

Mr. Willies Mchunu
KwaZulu-Natal Department of Community
Safety & Liaison
Private Bag X9143
Pietmaritzburg, 3200

8 July 2010

OPEN LETTER CONCERN ABOUT THE TRIAL AGAINST TWELVE INHABITANTS OF KENNEDY ROAD

Honorable Mr. Mchunu, we are a local tenants association in Witten, Germany. With 3300 member households we are an active member of the German Federation of Tenants (DMB) and various other national and international networks, which stand for the right to housing.

We are writing to you, because we are very concerned about the treatment of shack dwellers from the Kennedy Road settlement in Durban by the regional authorities. Our partners in South Africa told us, that you are the responsible member for Transport, Community Safety & Liaison of the Executive Council for the Province of KwaZulu-Natal and that this letter mainly should be addressed to you.

Recently, two delegates from the shack dwellers’ organization Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM), Durban visited us and other organizations in our region. We had a lot of exchange and discussions. We learned that Abahlali baseMjondolo is a membership based grassroots organization of shack dwellers and other poor people in which all positions are contested annually. It is multi-ethnic and multi-racial and there are many women in important positions within the organization.

We have been deeply impressed by the level of solidarity, social mobilization, consciousness and internal democracy this self-organization of poor people has been able to develop. AbM was able to organize innovative and effective campaigns for the housing rights of the urban poor across KwaZulu-Natal and in Cape Town. It’s achievements include the negotiation of an agreement to upgrade two settlements in Durban, including Kennedy Road, and to provide basic services to fourteen settlements as well as the recent Constitutional Court ruling in favor of the organization and against the KwaZulu-Natal Elimination and Prevention of Re-Emergence of Slums Act – a piece of legislation widely condemned as repressive and reactionary in the international human rights community. In recent days the eThekwini Municipality in Durban has announced that it intends to provide basic services to all shack settlements in Durban on the model first negotiated between AbM and the Municipality. This will improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of people.

Recent shack fires in the Kennedy Road informal settlement, which made thousands of people homeless, again underline the urgency of change in South Africa’s policies regarding informal settlements, and the need for independent self-organization of the concerned dwellers in order to achieve this goal. The big success of AbM in it’s legal proceedings against the KwaZulu-Natal Slums Act show that in South Africa there also is a chance that this way can lead to real change in favor of the people.

It is our permanent understanding that a democratic society and progressive social housing policies necessarily need independent organizations of inhabitants, which remind state authorities of their duties for the human right to housing and that, therefore, such independent organization must be respected and supported by the state. However, developments since last autumn give us reason to doubt that authorities in KwaZulu-Natal are always following these democratic principles.

By AbM, but also by international media, Amnesty International, the Centre on Housing Rights & Evictions and various church and development aid organizations we have been informed about the circumstances under which twelve activists from the Kennedy Road shack settlement in Clare Estate, Durban, will stand trial on a charge of murder at 12 July 2010. We are deeply concerned that the prosecutors are not following given national and international legal standards. We fear that these prosecutions are aiming to criminalize the shack-dweller movement of Abahlali baseMjondolo.

On the night of the 26th of September 2009 there was violent conflict in the Kennedy Road settlement which resulted in two deaths, a number of injuries and the demolition of the homes of the Abahlali baseMjondolo leadership in the settlement and their expulsion from the settlement. More than 30 homes were destroyed and more than a thousand people fled the settlement.

Testimonies of independent witnesses proved that the attack began when a group of around forty armed men stormed an Abahlali baseMjondolo Youth Camp shouting slogans against Abahlali baseMjondolo and its leaders and for the African National Congress. There was also a clear ethnic (pro-Zulu and anti-isiXhosa speaking Mphondo people) aspect to what they were shouting. Some members of the community made several attempts to call the nearest police station and the reply they got was that there were no police vans available.

The next morning police arrested thirteen active shack dwellers of Kennedy Road who are also members of AbM. Abahlali baseMjondolo and some independent witnesses allege that following the arrests, and in the presence of the police, the homes of all the key Abahlali baseMjondolo leaders in the settlement were systematically destroyed. There is no dispute about that fact that the homes were destroyed or the fact that no one has been arrested for this.

Abahlali baseMjondolo reports that after the attack the demolition of homes of its supporters in the Kennedy Road settlement continued. Activists feared for their lives and left the neighborhood. All this and a general climate of fear and intimidation has seriously disrupted the movement’s work.

It is quite clear that the official account of the attacks is not accurate. It is also clear that there are reasons for serious concern about the judicial process following the attack. Five of the twelve are still in custody although there never had been the correct following of the law which states clearly that no one may be detained more than 24 hours without proof of wrongdoing being brought before a judge. We were also told that the judge clearly said that due to political pressure, she cannot grant the bail for Kennedy Five.

We got the impression that this whole proceedings have a political background. To us it seems, that there is a strategy to criminalize and destroy the political independence of AbM. This would be against national and international standards of civil and human rights.

On the other hand, we really hope that the responsible authorities in KwaZulu Natal will not allow the continuation of these illegal practices and immediately will guarantee that the trial of July 12 will follow the legal standards and that there will be a full investigation into the demolition of the homes of AbM activists in the settlement and the expulsion of the movement from the settlement.

We strongly support the demand of Abahlali baseMjondolo for an independent commission of inquiry and that the judicial process should be halted until such an enquiry has been conducted. We also demand that the right to free association in Kennedy Road must be immediately defended by the police and that all political organizations must be allowed to operate freely in the settlement. We will continue to observe the further action the authorities undertake in this case. We kindly ask you to reply to this letter.

Sincerely
Knut Unger
Speaker of Witten Tenants Association

ANC Intimidation Continues in Kennedy Road

Update: On the night of 25 April 8 more shacks were demolished following an ANC meeting in the settlement. The next morning 300 people were left homeless in a fire. The cause of the fire has not yet been established.

Tuesday, 20 April 2010
Abahlali baseMjondolo Press Statement

ANC Intimidation Continues in Kennedy Road

On Sunday an ANC MP in the Provincial Parliament by the name of Dora Dlamini intimidated Nozuko Hulushe, a Kennedy Road resident and Abahlali baseMjondolo member, and demanded that she withdraw her assault charge against a local ANC leader before the case goes to trial.

The violent intimidation of AbM in the Kennedy Road settlement began with mysterious but very well organised and extremely brutal assaults on AbM leaders S’bu Zikode and Mashumi Figlan. Then, as the whole world knows, an armed mob, chanting ethnic slogans, went from door to door on the night of 28 September 2009 driving well known AbM leaders and members from their homes. Their homes were destroyed and looted while the police and local politicians looked on. The office of Willies Mchunu, the provincial MEC for Safety & Security, issued a statement that declared that Kennedy Road had been ‘liberated’.

The intimidation of AbM members, including the demolition of people’s houses, continued in the settlement for months after the main attack. There has also been extreme public intimidation, including the open issuing of death threats against various people, at the court appearance of the people arrested after the attack on the movement. One person who does not live in the Kennedy Road settlement was threatened with death and had to flee her home after she commented on our Constitutional Court victory against the Slums Act on the TV news.

One of the many ongoing incidents of violent intimidation against AbM in Kennedy Road occurred on the 7th of February this year. Well known AbM member, Nozuko Hulushe, was publicly assaulted, without warning or provocation, by Zibuyile Ngcobo and her sister Nana. Zibuyile Ngcobo is a well known ANC member and a member of the ANC BEC in Ward 25. She was part of the same group that attacked AbM on 28 September 2009 and she was also involved in the attack on AbM comrades from Siyanda while they were in the Kennedy Road settlement. She was made chairperson of the Kennedy Road ANC branch after the elected leadership was violently driven from the settlement. She is also alleged to have received a cheque from the ANC IN December. There are strong allegations that some of the attackers were paid for driving AbM out of Kennedy Road. Ngcobo attended all the court appearances for the Kennedy 13 wearing a dress made from a Jacob Zuma flag and she engaged in highly threatening behaviour outside the court.

On 7 February Ngcobo and her sister attacked Nozuko Hulushe with sticks and a brick beating her to the ground and pulling out her hair. During the beating Nozuko was told that she was ‘a problem in the community’ as she ‘did not attend ANC meetings’. Nozuko was severely injured in the attack and two of her teeth were knocked loose. It seemed that her attackers would have killed her if they had not been stopped. The attack was only stopped, as the main attack on 28 September 2009 was only stopped, when community members spontaneously intervened.

It has been very difficult and often impossible for AbM members who have been attacked, assaulted and driven from their homes in the Kennedy Road settlement to open cases with the police. This is not surprising in view of that the fact that the police and senior ANC politicians openly supported the attacks. However Nozuko was one of the few people who succeeded to open a case against her attackers. Immediately after she was beaten she went to the District Surgeon to complete the J8 form. There is therefore a good record of her injuries. There are a number of witnesses to the attack and she has a very strong case against Zibuyile Ngcobo. The case is due to be heard in court on 28 April 2010. This case will be very embarrassing for the ANC.

AbM has not been completely driven from the Kennedy Road settlement. Organising has continued in the settlement underground and more openly outside the settlement. There was strong support from Kennedy Road for the recent March on Jacob Zuma. Every Sunday the Kennedy Road AbM branch continues to have their regular meeting – but now they hold the assembly in a park in the city.

On Sunday Nozuko attended the weekly Kennedy Road AbM meeting in the park. When she returned to her home in the settlement she found that the Sydenham police were there with a woman, in a car with a driver. This woman was talking to her daughter. She told Nuzoko that she is working in parliament and she showed an ID card with her picture and an SAPS badge. It was written ‘Liaison Officer Member of Parliament’ and that her name was Dora Dlamini. Dlamini told Nozuko that she was there to work on abused women and she said that the case that Nuzoko has opened against Zibuyile Ngcobo is abusive. She instructed Nuzuko to withdraw the case before it goes to court. Nzukuko said that she knows her rights and that she refuses to withdraw the case. Dlamini said that she was ‘giving a homework’ to Nozuko and that she will came back later to check that the charges have been withdrawn. She was speaking as people who are having a higher position speak. She was very bolshy and refused to listen.

After Dlamini left Nozuko went to the Sydenham police station and tried to lay a charge of intimidation against her but they would not accept the case.

At 9:45 that night Nozuko received a threatening phone call from a private number. The caller warned her to drop the case. She received a further two phone calls before she switched her phone off.

We have known Dora Dlamini for a long time. She is from Ward 25 and has been living in Sydenham Heights for many years. When she got the position in parliament we were all very surprised. She was never useful to the community at all. She lived just up the road from Kennedy Road but we never saw her when the settlement burnt, when babies were dying of diarrhoea, when women were raped looking for a private place to go relive themselves in the night because we are denied toilets or when we lived, year after year, with 6 taps for thousands of people. But as soon as we ask for justice, as soon as ask for the truth to be recognised, as soon as we ask to be safe from political violence, as soon as we make it clear that we will not be beaten back into silence she is at the settlement to intimidate us.

If we lose hope in the ANC and organise ourselves we are attacked. But, really, can we be expected to maintain hope in the ANC if people like Dara Dlamini are taken to these high offices?

We were attacked in the night and driven from our homes. Many of us lost everything. Our attackers had the full support of the police and the politicians. That is not democracy. There is no democracy for the poor in this country. A democracy that is not for everyone is not a real democracy therefore there is no democracy for anyone in this country.

No evidence has been brought against our five comrades that are still in Westville Prison six months after the attack. But when we bring real and clear evidence against our attackers we are intimidated by powerful people who demand that we drop the case against them. When we are attacked and our homes are destroyed that attack is called‘liberation’. When we succeed to lay a charge against our attackers that charge is called ‘abuse’. Words have lost their proper meanings in this country. They have just become more weapons to keep us, as the poor, in our place.

We have had to develop our own democracy. We have had to develop our own analysis of the truth of what is happening in this country. We concluded, long ago, that the only force that will win the poor a decent place in this society – a place in the cities, in the discussions, in the schools, in the universities, on the land and in the economy – is the power of the organised poor. We invite everyone who is prepared to talk to us and not for us or about us to join us in the struggle to make this democracy real for the poor. Right now that struggle has to start with concrete actions to defend people who are under attack, who have been chased from their homes and who are in prison. We are issuing a clear warning to the ANC that if anything happens to Nozuko Hulushe we will hold them accountable. She has the full support of the whole of AbM and we will stand with her in this difficult time and we will keep standing with her until she is free to live in Kennedy Road and to support what ever organisation and ideas she wants to support.

We strongly feel that either the ANC or Willies Mchubu have given Dora Dlamini a mandate to intimidate Nozuko. After the attack on AbM Mchunu and his team prepared a report on what happened. They took a resolution that AbM ‘must be disbanded’ and reported this to parliament. We are calling on the ANC to give us some clarity. Have they given Dora Dlamini the mandate to intimidate Nuzuko? If it was not the ANC as a whole does the mandate come from Willies Mchunu? Will the ANC distance itself from Dora’s activities?

We repeat our call for an independent and credible commission of inquiry into the attack and ongoing intimidation in Kennedy Road.

For more information please contact Abahlali baseMjondolo on 031 304 6420.

Witness: Questions for Willies Mchunu

The article by Willies Mchunu, the Safety & Security MEC who notoriously claimed to have have ‘liberated’ Kennedy Road after the attack on the AbM, to which the letter below was written in response, is online here.

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=29984

Questions for Willies Mchunu
27 Oct 2009

SAFETY and Security MEC Willies Mchunu’s article (The Witness, October 20) evades almost every key aspect­ of the Kennedy Road situation. Abahlali baseMjondolo (ABM) is respected internationally and throughout South Africa as a democratic, nonviolent social movement. It is, in fact, Mchunu, and not his critics, who brings the African National Congress into disrepute with his vicious, undemocratic attack on ABM.

Let us ask Mchunu to respond to the following questions. Why have none of those who attacked the ABM youth camp on September 26 been arrested, but only those who are alleged to have resisted this attack, some of whom were not even present at the time? Why did Mchunu’s police and ANC ward councillor, Yacoob Baig, stand by passively while the shacks of 27 ABM leaders were destroyed on September 27? Why did hundreds of people from Kennedy Road flee from the attackers, many losing all their possessions? Why does the destruction of shacks continue and why do local ANC leaders who occupy Kennedy Road now threaten anyone who supports ABM with destruction of their shack, or worse?

Mchunu should be clear that the ANC’s tactics will backfire. Long after the name of Mchunu is forgotten, that of Abahlali baseMjondolo will resound with glory.

MARTIN LEGASSICK
Mowbray, Cape Town

Kennedy Road Olive Branch a Sham

http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-10-11-kennedy-olive-branch-a-sham

Kennedy olive branch a sham
NIREN TOLSI | DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA – Oct 11 2009 06:00

The hatchet job on Durban’s Kennedy Road informal settlement continued this week with an alleged “healing process” by the KwaZulu-Natal government.

Its stated purpose was to effect reconciliation in Kennedy Road, home to about 7000 people, after last week’s violence that left two confirmed deaths, displaced several hundred and destroyed the homes of Abahlali baseMjondolo (ABM) president Sbu Zikode and other ABM members, who were forced into hiding.

On Sunday the KwaZulu-Natal department of safety and security held successive meetings for stakeholders, the community and religious leaders.

Most of the church group, such as Rubin Phillip, Anglican bishop of KwaZulu-Natal and chairperson of the province’s Christian Council, refused to attend in solidarity with ABM, which boycotted the event.

Fearing for their lives, and that the ANC would stage-manage the public meeting, Zikode and other ABM leaders kept well away from the venue, where, a week earlier, an armed mob threatened members of their youth league.

The ABM also protested that, as elected community leaders and victims of a purge, they could not be expected to sit side by side with attackers driven by hatred, lawlessness and political intolerance.

The Mail & Guardian conducted a survey of the 88 people who signed the attendance register at the “stakeholders” meeting. Nineteen were provincial government representatives, 12 from the municipality and eight from the police. After subtracting media and representatives of other community policing forums and clusters, the register reflected 14 ANC members, seven South African National Civic Organisation (Sanco) members and seven people claiming to be “residents” of Kennedy Road.

Telephone calls confirmed most of those claiming to be ordinary Kennedy Road residents or inhabitants with ANC affiliations were in fact from other areas, such as the Puntan’s Hill, Sydenham Heights and the Foreman Road settlement.

Many of the outsiders were given prime time at the community meeting.

One alleged that an award-winning Mfene (Pondo dance) group from Kennedy Road had instigated the attacks. Isabel Mbuyisa, a “resident/leader” according the register, but in reality an ANC member from Sydenham Heights, alleged that the dance group was a front for political mobilisation.

Mbuyisa also railed against alleged corruption in the ABM, whereas ordinary residents talked of unemployment, health concerns and crime.

The meeting was an exercise in speaking with forked tongues, with government leaders talking left and others rather using anti-democratic-tipped boots to kick heads in.

Provincial safety and security minister Willies Mchunu emphasised the need to “resolve the matter through non-violent means .. As government we are not against any person or organisation in the settlement. If they want to participate in any activity critical of government, we accept that.” Freedom of association, movement and thought were guaranteed at Kennedy Road because “that is what we fought for”.

eThekwini councillor and chairperson of the municipality’s housing committee Nigel Gumede said that Kennedy Road “should have been developed a long time ago” and blamed ABM for inhabitants still living in squalor.

He said the social movement had opposed government’s housing efforts and was anti-development, as continued deprivation guaranteed funding from academics and NGOs.

Gumede said “one of the many obstacles” that had stopped government delivering houses to residents was ABM’s Constitutional Court case against the KwaZulu-Natal Slums Act.

He added a dash of tribal hatred, saying that “in our [presumably Zulu] culture, this [Mfene] dance is associated with muthi” (witchcraft) and needed to be investigated.

It was obvious that local and provincial government officials, many in ANC colours, were there to extend the party’s influence in the settlement.

Contrary to the municipality’s policy, since 2002, of not electrifying shack settlements, Gumede promised electricity to Kennedy Road residents “within three weeks”.

New houses, especially in the long-mooted Cornubia development, have also been promised to residents and the provincial department of social development will be consulted about delivering food parcels to the area.

Meanwhile, ABM leaders remain in hiding under growing threat to themselves and their families. Their office at Kennedy Road was evacuated after warnings last week that it would be ransacked. The movement now holds meetings in secret.

ABM has called for the “immediate restoration of democracy in Kennedy Road”, “a genuinely independent and credible investigation” into the attacks and “genuine and safe negotiation on the way forward between the ANC and ABM”. It has also urged Zuma to visit the area and address the crisis.