Grim rows of grey metal shacks stretch out with military precision in the barren sandy ground.
Residents call it Blikkiesdorp, a vast, soulless temporary camp for Cape Town's homeless and evicted that has attracted a media spotlight ahead of the football World Cup.
"This is basically like a concentration camp," said Mohammed Ali, 38, who lives in the settlement with his wife and two daughters.
Kilometres away from the upscale city's attractions that will greet football fans, some residents accuse officials of using Blikkiesdorp for a World Cup clean-up in a debate that has unveiled South Africa's crushing poverty.
"They're moving people staying on the streets or staying in shacks in the back of the yards. They're moving all those people to this place for 2010. They're cleaning up basically the roads," said Ali.
South Africa has poured billions into hosting Africa's first football World Cup with new stadiums, transport systems and a beefed up police force.
But while children gleefully undergo football training on a sandy patch near a busy road, there is little sign in Blikkiesdorp of the World Cup kick-off on June 11.
"Why didn't they use some of that money to build houses?" asked community leader Beverley Jacobs, 42, who is spending her third winter in one of the camp's 18-square-metre shacks.
Blikkiesdorp was set up as temporary emergency housing in 2008 and has grown to nearly more than 1 500 structures with electricity and communal toilets and water taps.
Priscilla Ludidi shares her shack with four children and her 82-year-old mother, who sleeps on a piece of sponge on the ground.
"All the structures that we're living in are leaking. We are four families on one tap. We are four families on one toilet, which is so unhygienic," said the 44-year-old.
"They promised us it's only three to six months until you get your houses. They always lie."
Former homeless couple Rina Mina Kiwido, 48, and James Adams, 48, came to Blikkiesdorp last September via a social worker, with a group of people from near the Cape Town stadium.
They are aware of the claims of clean-ups to sanitise the city for foreign visitors, but are still happy with the move.
"We are off the street," said Adams.
As foreign news crews flock to Blikkiesdorp to show a disturbingly less glamorous Cape Town, officials deny that the city is being stripped of its homeless.
"There's no clean up campaign that is happening,"said city spokeswoman Kylie Hatton told AFP, saying it gets repeated requests to move to the camp.
"The area was already almost 80 percent full by the end of last year so there is no dramatic move towards moving people into the area in the build up to the World Cup."
But in Blikkiesdorp, frustrations are high.
"We are not eager to stay here. We don't want to stay here. This is not home. We were forced to be here," said Washeila Smith, 57.
"We have no other option. We're waiting on the government to sort us out with a house, with a home. This is not home."
Residents call it Blikkiesdorp, a vast, soulless temporary camp for Cape Town's homeless and evicted that has attracted a media spotlight ahead of the football World Cup.
"This is basically like a concentration camp," said Mohammed Ali, 38, who lives in the settlement with his wife and two daughters.
Kilometres away from the upscale city's attractions that will greet football fans, some residents accuse officials of using Blikkiesdorp for a World Cup clean-up in a debate that has unveiled South Africa's crushing poverty.
"They're moving people staying on the streets or staying in shacks in the back of the yards. They're moving all those people to this place for 2010. They're cleaning up basically the roads," said Ali.
South Africa has poured billions into hosting Africa's first football World Cup with new stadiums, transport systems and a beefed up police force.
But while children gleefully undergo football training on a sandy patch near a busy road, there is little sign in Blikkiesdorp of the World Cup kick-off on June 11.
"Why didn't they use some of that money to build houses?" asked community leader Beverley Jacobs, 42, who is spending her third winter in one of the camp's 18-square-metre shacks.
Blikkiesdorp was set up as temporary emergency housing in 2008 and has grown to nearly more than 1 500 structures with electricity and communal toilets and water taps.
Priscilla Ludidi shares her shack with four children and her 82-year-old mother, who sleeps on a piece of sponge on the ground.
"All the structures that we're living in are leaking. We are four families on one tap. We are four families on one toilet, which is so unhygienic," said the 44-year-old.
"They promised us it's only three to six months until you get your houses. They always lie."
Former homeless couple Rina Mina Kiwido, 48, and James Adams, 48, came to Blikkiesdorp last September via a social worker, with a group of people from near the Cape Town stadium.
They are aware of the claims of clean-ups to sanitise the city for foreign visitors, but are still happy with the move.
"We are off the street," said Adams.
As foreign news crews flock to Blikkiesdorp to show a disturbingly less glamorous Cape Town, officials deny that the city is being stripped of its homeless.
"There's no clean up campaign that is happening,"said city spokeswoman Kylie Hatton told AFP, saying it gets repeated requests to move to the camp.
"The area was already almost 80 percent full by the end of last year so there is no dramatic move towards moving people into the area in the build up to the World Cup."
But in Blikkiesdorp, frustrations are high.
"We are not eager to stay here. We don't want to stay here. This is not home. We were forced to be here," said Washeila Smith, 57.
"We have no other option. We're waiting on the government to sort us out with a house, with a home. This is not home."
- Sapa-AFP
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