Wednesday, January 31, 2007

We must end poverty to end crime, says deputy

South Africa must end poverty for millions and build moral values to help stop violent crime and corruption, the country’s deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said on Tuesday…

“The unacceptable numbers of South Africans that still live in poverty and deprivation clearly is one of the problems (contributing to crime),” Mlambo-Ngcuka said at a conference in Cape Town. Reuters

Another day, another fire

FOR the umpteenth time, families living in Masiphumelele are finding themselves sifting through ashes to salvage what few possessions remain after yet another fire ravaged a portion of the township on Wednesday.

This time 100 families have been burned out and left destitute in a fire believed to have been started by an unattended paraffin stove.

And overcrowded conditions are again being blamed for preventing firefighters from reaching the heart of the fire.

“This site, however, was not part of an informal settlement as was the case in all the fires in Masiphumelele last year. It almost makes the whole event more tragic, because a solution to the problem seems even further out of reach,” says ward councillor Felicity Purchase.

“The fire occurred in an official neighbourhood, which shows that these fires cannot be stemmed by the provision of houses alone. The problem goes much deeper than that,” she says.

Purchase is of the opinion that the economic collapse of certain parts of the Eastern Cape and the resulting influx into Cape Town and Masiphumelele lies at the root of the problem…

“The problem of overcrowding, as Purchase says, is a complex one and the responsibility to solve it lies with government,” he says. “The constant influx of people searching for jobs in the Western Cape is not something we can judge as it is their right to do so, to make a living for themselves.

“Government needs to look at a program of job creation in the Eastern Cape as the space and resources in the Western Cape cannot carry the added human pressure from migration..."


Peoples Post

Monday, January 29, 2007

Two toddlers killed in a shack fire

Two children, aged one and three years, burnt to death in a Philippi informal settlement at the weekend and firefighters are bracing themselves for another busy week as more hot and windy weather is expected.

Lisakhasa Nqwini and her sister Ayakha were killed on Saturday in the Sweethome settlement in Philippi…

In the Nomzamo informal settlement in Strand on Sunday, a blaze also destroyed 10 shacks leaving 50 people homeless.

In Taiwan, Khayelitsha, firefighters managed to put out a fire after it gutted 12 dwellings occupied by 35 people…Cape Times

Report attacks SA crime and corruption

African governments have warned South Africa that growing corruption, rampant violent crime and xenophobia are undermining confidence in the continent’s largest economy and threaten the stability of post-apartheid democracy…

The report says that because of “creeping corruption” and conflicts of interest proliferating in public life, South Africans “feel betrayed, regarding corruption as a negation of democratic gains after a long period of struggle”…

The African Union report noted that concerns were raised not only about large-scale graft but also corruption in everyday life, such as the provision of housing. M&G

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Firefighters battling to curb devastating fires

Scorching heat and winds in the Cape Peninsula and Boland have kept firefighters working around the clock battling devastating fires. One of the last fires was reported just after 6pm last night at the Masiphumelele informal settlement near Fish Hoek.

Fourteen fire trucks and two helicopters were dispatched to the area. At least 100 shacks were destroyed in the blaze leaving around 500 people homeless. No casualties were reported.

The affected families will be housed in a community centre, and the City of Cape Town will be providing them with blankets, clothes and food.

Ian Schnetler, the fire services’ acting chief, says fire fighters have been battling veldfires all week. SABC

Firefighters pushed to limit on scorching day

Raging fires and searing heat saw firefighting services stretched to capacity as they battled to extinguish more than 20 fires across the Peninsula and Boland on Wednesday.

As temperatures soared into the high 30°Cs and 40°Cs and winds fanned flames, there was not a single fire engine left at any of Cape Town’s 28 fire stations, while exhausted firefighters were said to be “taking strain”…

Earlier, the three helicopters and more than seven fire engines struggled to contain a fire in Khayelitsha Site B. About 100 homes were destroyed, leaving more than 500 people homeless.

People trying to escape the heat crowded together in small patches of shade as they watched firefighters hosing down smoking and blackened piles of corrugated iron.

The city of Cape Town’s disaster management spokesperson, Johan Minnie, said those left homeless had been offered temporary accommodation in a Site C community hall.

He said no one had been reported injured.

The cause of the fire had yet to be determined… Cape Times

110 fires in 24 hours

A total of 110 fires have raged across greater Cape Town in just 24 hours - leaving firefighters exhausted and fearing the worst with temperatures in the city set to reach a blistering 38°C on Thursday…

The City of Cape Town’s acting chief fire officer, Ian Schnetler, said this morning that the 110 fires had been recorded between midnight on Tuesday and midnight last night - 66 of them grass or bush fires.

‘Close to 1 000 people had been left homeless after fires destroyed 240 shacks’

“Some firefighters left the stations at 9am yesterday (Wednesday) and had still not returned after 8pm last night,” said Schnetler. “It’s hectic.”

At the last count, close to 1 000 people had been left homeless after fires destroyed 240 shacks.

Help was at hand on Thursday for 320 people stranded when a devastating blaze tore through an informal settlement off Pama Road in Khayelitsha on Thursday, destroying 120 homes…Cape Argus

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Informal Settlements are the XDR-TB breeding grounds…


South Africa should forcibly isolate patients infected with a highly drug-resistant strain of tuberculosis to stop it spreading on the Aids-hit continent, researchers said yesterday.

South Africa’s outbreak of extreme drug resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB), which has killed at least 74 people in several months, may force authorities to override patients’ rights in favour of the general public’s health, the study in the journal PLoS Medicine said.

“XDR-TB represents a major threat to public health. If the only way to manage it is to forcibly confine, then it needs to be done,” said Jerome Singh, study co-author and lawyer at Durban’s Centre for the Aids Programme of Research in SA…

“Ultimately in such crises, the interests of public health must prevail over the rights of the individual.”

South Africa has logged almost 400 cases of XDR-TB, which is virtually impervious to treatment by most common TB drugs, and an unprecedented 30 new cases are diagnosed every month, according to the study… Cape Times

Monday, January 22, 2007

Firefighters battle fire season

Scores of firefighters battled to contain more than 10 veld fires that broke out across the city and Franschhoek on Saturday, fanned by high winds.

In some of the incidents several fire engines and helicopters had to be deployed when the flames began closing in on homes.

Although no one was hurt in any of the incidents, several Khayelitsha families were left homeless after a veld fire destroyed their homes.

Cape Town fire department spokesperson Deon Smit said the Khayelitsha fire had spread rapidly and that by the time firefighters arrived at the scene, the blaze had already reached several homes.

“It was one of the largest fires and we had to dispatch three vehicles to the scene. Luckily no one was hurt,” Smit said.

Veld fires also broke out in Strandfontein, Ravensmead, Mitchell’s Plain, Mfuleni, Gugulethu, Kuils River, Stellenbosch and Nyanga. Sunday Argus

Friday, January 19, 2007

Squatters and cops lock horns in eviction row

City officials and Metro Police clashed with squatters living close to the N7 Bridge on Vanguard Drive after officials began breaking down their homes on Thursday.

The bridge was damaged by a fire which also razed 70 shacks and claimed the lives of two men in October.

Laura Anthony, who lost her husband Isaac Gedezana in the fire, said: “Where are we going to sleep? How do you guys sleep at night?”

Anthony and other squatters clashed repeatedly with officials as their shacks were torn down.

Another squatter, John Anderson, said: “This is not right. They came on Christmas Eve and it was still raining that day. We thought they would feel sorry for us but they just broke the shacks down.”

Things got heated when Anthony was pulled to the ground defending her property and the situation threatened to boil over.

The N7 residents were given the option to move to Happy Valley, Delft and Langa but have refused because their present location is close to where they are employed and where their children go to school.

Many of the people were housed at a community hall in Factreton but a few left to return to the bridge.

Mayco member for housing Dan Plato said: “They still live in the community hall and we have not evicted them from the hall.

“It seems that the situation has become volatile in the hall, with families evicting other families and some have decided to move back to the bridge.”

Plato also said that there is no way that people will be allowed to move back because of the dangers associated with living under or close to bridges. Cape Times

Thursday, January 18, 2007

20 shacks destroyed in Boland fire

About 20 shacks have been gutted in Nduli near Ceres in the Boland. A fire brigade spokesperson says a number of people were left homeless late last night, but they were accommodated by family and friends in the area.

No one was injured in the blaze. The spokesperson says arson is suspected to be the cause of the fire.

Meanwhile, ten shacks burnt down at Prince Alfred Hamlet near Ceres yesterday afternoon. There were also no fatalities in that fire. SABC

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

De Soto solution not for SA

RENOWNED economist Hernando de Soto says he has found an answer to global poverty. “Let’s give poor people individual titles to land so they can access credit, loans, and investment, and transform it into live capital,” he once said. His ideas have been peddled across the developing world by development agencies. In SA, the notion of providing individual title to land previously owned through customary or collective land rights has become fashionable in development circles. De Soto’s approach is intended to “capitalise the poor”, as in the west, where every piece of land is documented as part of a vast legal process that endows owners with the potential to use it as collateral or capital. Land titling in SA has engendered strong opposition from nongovernmental organisations, social movements, and some land rights experts.

Why aren’t they celebrating De Soto’s prescriptions?

Because his policy prescriptions oversimplify the complexities of informal economy and land rights.

While SA has made progress in many aspects of development, it has one of the world’s highest levels of inequality, and the gap between rich and poor is widening. De Soto claims that this inequality is caused by the absence of formal rights to assets owned by the poor. He insists that capitalism can be made to work for the poor through formalising their property rights in houses, land, and small businesses. But the reality on the ground is different.

In Ekuthuleni, for example, a rural community of 224 households in KwaZulu-Natal, residents live on state-registered land that they wish to formally acquire through land reform and hold in collective ownership. Community members say they want to hold land in common to “prevent strangers from coming in and causing conflicts”, and because they cannot afford to procure individual titles. Most households survive on welfare grants supplemented with subsistence agriculture and natural resources harvested from the commons.

Individual ownership doesn’t make sense in this context. In Ekuthuleni, property ownership is never exclusive to one person and is always shared by a changing number of family members. The fields are used exclusively at some times, jointly at others. People borrow them from one another, sometimes for generations, until it’s no longer clear whose field it is. Boundaries between properties are not clear. Some follow rivers and ridges. There are few straight lines and access to plots is via footpaths that follow contours or cattle-made paths and crisscross other people’s land.

The experience of Ekuthuleni clearly reveals the limitations of the dominant system of property rights, which requires that an individual rights holder be identified, describes the exclusive rights of the rights holder, and depicts boundaries through beacons and geo-referencing. It reveals that there is often incompatibility between property rights in community-based systems and the requirements of individual, private property.

Some features of extralegal property regimes found in SA’s informal settlements and communal areas provide a key to the solutions: their social embeddedness; the importance of land and housing as assets that help secure livelihoods; the layered and relative nature of rights; and the flexible character of boundaries. Approaches based on western property regimes fail to acknowledge and respond to these features.

Attempts to address the problem through one-off solutions involving high levels of state investment need to give way to a more nuanced, incremental, integrated development approach that would extend infrastructure, services, and economic opportunity linked to legal recognition of diverse tenure forms.

Further, the enormous inequities in property ownership inherited from the apartheid era remain a fundamental constraint on the livelihoods of the poor. Poverty reduction policies must therefore include a central focus on large-scale redistribution programmes.

Meaningful reform requires a rigorous and far-reaching approach. Tenure reform remains necessary and important, but is far from sufficient. Much more attention should be paid to supporting existing social practices that have widespread legitimacy rather than expensive western solutions that try to replace them.

‖Cousins is director of the Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies at the University of Western Cape. Hornby is an independent researcher formerly employed by the Association For Rural Advancement.‖

Business Day - News Worth Knowing

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Chaos, clashes over private house sales in Bay townships

SELLING houses privately without proper sales agreements or an understanding of titles deeds has caused confusion in some Port Elizabeth townships.

Several estate agents and ward councillors say they have been asked to resolve or give advice on private sales that have turned sour.

Motherwell Ward 54 councillor Likhaya Matebese said of all the cases involving private sales, the deal almost always went wrong. “People come to my office with disputes over house sales daily… The Herald

Housing protestors hit by rubber bullets

Seven people were hit by rubber bullets fired to disperse 300 protesting residents at the Reeston informal settlement outside East London, Eastern Cape police said on Tuesday.

They were taken to hospital by ambulance, said Superintendent Mtati Tana.

He said residents took to the streets shortly before 4am in a protest against poor service delivery in their area.

“They are complaining about the housing situation, saying the municipality is overlooking them and is allocating RDP houses to people from other areas,” said Tana.

The police used rubber bullets and stun grenades to disperse them when they started burning tyres and intimidating motorists, he said.

He said Tana said members of the Buffalo city municipality were trying to arrange a meeting with residents. - Sapa

Friday, January 12, 2007

Hout Bay Housing Battles

A civic organisation that has been pushing for land to relieve the housing shortage in Hout Bay has responded with caution to Cosatu provincial secretary Tony Ehrenreich’s call this week for land grabs.

Hangberg civic organisation chairperson Timothy Jacobs said community organisations would first follow “legal options” for obtaining land.

Community leaders have been lobbying to have a 16-hectare piece of state land next to Imizamo Yethu designated for housing.

The land problem in Hout Bay - which has been described as a time bomb - is emerging as the focal issue in political campaigning in the build-up to a municipal by-election there next month… Cape Argus

Land reform set to be hot potato in 2007

Land reform will be at the forefront of political battles this year, as impatience with the slow pace of the government’s programme sets in.

Landless people are beginning to act to solve their own problems and an increasing number are saying they had “nothing to lose”, an expert has warned.

A lack of national leadership on the issue, especially of urban land reform, had placed the onus on local government to resolve issues, another said.

This week’s call by Cosatu provincial secretary Tony Ehrenreich that residents of Hout Bay’s informal settlements should stake their claims and “grab” unused land owned by the wealthy comes hot on the heels of a foiled Free State farm attack and a recent murder of a farm manager in KwaZulu-Natal…

Ruth Hall, researcher for the programme of Land and Agrarian Studies at the University of the Western Cape at Plaas, said calls for the government to take a stronger stand on urban and rural land seemed to be growing.

Mercia Andrews of the Trust for Community Outreach and Education said rural poverty was continuing to deepen and people would try to find their own solutions. Cape Argus

Bridge-dwellers still homeless

While the City of Cape Town discusses where to relocate them, impoverished residents living alongside the Vanguard Drive railway bridge after their informal settlement burnt down last year, face a dismal future.

Using discarded pieces of wood, plastic and cardboard, some have started rebuilding their shelters alongside the bridge.

Dan Plato, mayoral committee member for housing, said on Thursday that they had been told they were not allowed to rebuild their homes under or alongside the bridge.

‘The sun makes us so hot, ants and insects bite us all the time’

In November a fire below the bridge claimed two lives and destroyed 70 dwellings leaving about 150 people homeless.

“(On Thursday) I received a few calls from the public alerting me to the fact residents were rebuilding along the bridge. The city is investigating what to do with the residents. We are in negotiations to secure a piece of land in Goodwood next to the Maitland cemetery for them,” said Plato.

Whether the people would be allowed to occupy the land would be finalised in the next few weeks, he said.

“They were first offered accommodation in the Facreton Community Hall but in the end about 50 families were staying there which equals approximately 200 people. There wasn’t enough space and they had no privacy to wash or dress. We’re taking this into consideration and planning what to do with them,” he said.

Meanwhile, about 40 people live in the bushes alongside the bridge and say they feel hopeless about the future.

“We feel terrible. The sun makes us so hot, ants and insects bite us all the time and we’re tired every day. We have nothing. People are getting sick it’s so bad and the six children living like this don’t deserve it,” said Nonceba Ndeyi as she lay on a bare mattress and swatted flies and insects away.

She said she and her partner, Eric Cishe, had stayed in the community hall but conditions were so poor they chose to return to the bridge.

“It was so bad; we rather chose to live like this,” Ndeyi said as she pointed to their “house,” a mattress and sheet of plastic propped up by wooden planks and bricks.

Patricia Cishe said she was also struggling to survive and take care of her nine-month-old son, John.

“We feel empty,” said Cishe. - Cape Times

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Hundreds displaced by Cape fire

More than 200 people have been displaced by a fire, which destroyed about 50 dwellings at the Doornbach informal settlement near Du Noon near Milnerton in the Western Cape.

Two water tankers and a helicopter were used to douse the flames. Johann Minnie, a disaster management spokesperson, said they will be assisting those affected with food, clothing, and accommodation.

There have been no reports of any injuries or fatalities. SABC

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Du Noon’s 3rd burn

On Tuesday, building materials will be handed out to the 11 people left homeless after a fire razed their Du Noon dwellings on Sunday night.

The blaze started about 9pm in Potsdam Road and destroyed four residences.

Spokesperson for the city’s disaster management, Johan Minnie, said affected residents would be issued with wooden planks and sheets of corrugated iron to help rebuild their homes.

He said they had meanwhile opted to stay with relatives instead of at alternative accommodation offered by the city.

On Monday the affected residents were also given hot meals and blankets.

An operator at the Cape Town Fire Command and Control Centre, who declined to be named, said five fire engines had managed to extinguish the fire within half an hour. She said no one had been reported injured and the cause of the blaze was being investigated. - Cape Times

Monday, January 8, 2007

Plan to turn Plett squatter camp into luxury estate

Some say the plan represents jobs while others maintain it’s another apartheid-style creation.

A poor squatter community has the power to make or break a mega country estate on the doorstep of one of South Africa’s elite coastal playgrounds.

Residents of Kurland Village township outside Plettenberg Bay, many of whom have for years worked for their rich polo-playing neighbours, now find themselves the kingmakers in a massive 2600ha plan for a new coastal “town” spearheaded by former Oppenheimer Family Holdings chief executive Clifford Elphick.

The developers want to incorporate the township into the plan - but first need the community’s blessing. Following two stormy meetings in the area, developers this week set up a new committee to negotiate a way forward.

According to Elphick’s plan the township dwellers, many of them unemployed, would be absorbed by a labour-intensive Macadamia nut farm and processing plant on his new mega estate. In addition, their homes would be upgraded and they would be included in a BEE profit-share scheme.

The proposed development - at the moment included in a new urban edge plan approved by the local Bitou council - still needs to be approved by the Western Cape provincial planning authority. - Sunday Times

‘Restricted’ tenants demand rent-to-buy flats

Residents of the government’s flagship N2 Gateway housing project in Langa have called for the state to offer a “rent to buy” option because their monthly rental payments offer no security of tenure and full home ownership.

Residents committee vice-chairperson Andile Nkosi said that “nothing would make our souls be more at peace after we die than leaving our children with a property”.

Nkosi complained that the city branch of Thubelisha Homes, a national Housing Department-linked company appointed to manage the project, “do not take us seriously”.

He said most of the tenants of the 705-apartment complex, especially the older ones, felt insecure about renting because “they feel it will take them nowhere”.

“Matters like ‘rent to buy’ and the quality of the flats should be raised with the city, or the provincial and national departments of housing,” said Nkosi.

The departments could not be reached for comment.

Thubelisha Homes client co-ordinator Thulani Zulu said that by February next year, all units would be occupied.

He said other planned N2 Gateway projects would be in Langa, Delft, New Rest in Gugulethu and Crossroads, but he could not say when building would start.

Nkosi said the lease agreement restricted tenants from even the smallest home basics like painting, laying tiles or putting up pictures…

Nkosi also said residents were concerned about a spate of thefts, apparently because keys were able to open the doors of more than one unit. He said there were 47 keys for the 705 flats at the complex and “it’s clear that the recent spate of thefts of people’s goods was due to this”.

Key blocks - a small lock-within-a-lock for added security - were also virtually interchangeable.

Zulu denied the existence of similar key and key blocks, but when the Cape Argus tested a key block, one flat’s key block opened the one next door. - Cape Argus

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Sleeping man dies as blaze traps him in shack

One resident was burnt to death and 445 others left destitute when a fire ripped through an informal settlement in Doornbach near Milnerton.

The charred body of Vusymsi Mahshana, 36, was found under a pile of rubble once the fire was put out just after 4am on Tuesday.

It is believed he was caught unwares by the flames while sleeping and was then trapped under the wreckage when his shack collapsed.

Two children also suffered minor burns as residents tried to escape the fire.

Wilfred Solomons, a spokesperson for the City’s Disaster Management, said 166 shacks were destroyed, but that the victims had been given building materials to rebuild their structures on Tuesday.

The senior fire officer on the scene, Steve Abrahamse, said firemen had battled to extinguish the blaze for six hours before it was doused.

A total of 11 fire engines had been activated to extinguish the fire, which was called in just after midnight.

“One of our fire fighters suffered heat exhaustion and another one had to be treated for smoke inhalation while on duty,” he said.

In another shack fire in Philippi, just off Vanguard Drive, on Tuesday morning, a further 50 people were left homeless and 12 shacks burnt down. The cause of the blaze is being investigated. - Cape Argus

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Three die as Peninsula hit by fires

Three people were killed and over 90 left homeless as fires devastated six areas in Cape Town over the New Year weekend.

Two men and a woman died in NY3A, Gugulethu after three shacks were razed, said Disaster Management spokesman Wilfred Solomons.

He said one person had to flee when another fire at NY7 in Gugulethu burnt down a shack on Sunday night… Cape Times