For the City of Cape Town to condemn people who occupy land is for the City of Cape Town to condemn the poor.
We note that yesterday, the 25th September 2011, the City of Cape Town's reactionary and often violent Anti-Land
Invasion Unit, with a help of Law Enforcement, Metro Police and South African Police Service demolished more than 100
structures at Kraaifontein. These structures had been erected by backyarders on an open field that had remained an
unused piece of land for more than 17 years. In some countries unused land is considered to be public land. Here in
South Africa the state will always attack any attempt by the poor to make good use of unused land.
It is essential that everyone is clear that although the poor are constantly presented as violence, especially the
organised poor, it is in fact that state that is violent. It is the state that invades and destroys people's homes and
attacks anyone that resists.
Late today the City of Cape Town issued a statement condemning people who are occupying land (they call it 'invading
land). They claim that 'land invasions impact on the City’s ability to address the housing backlog and serve the people
of Cape Town'. Once again the positive actions of poor people to improve their lives and do something about their
situation are presented as anti-social and criminal. We all know that the housing backlog would remain unaddressed if
all land occupations stopped tomorrow.
Last week the city of Cape Town launched its IDP. At the media briefing it acknowledge that it will take the City many,
many years to address shortage of housing within Cape Town. A politics of patience will cause us to die in the shacks
and backyards. We know it and the City know it. And yet they are willing to send our armed men to intimidate us and beat
us into accepting a system that oppresses us and which offers us no hope of decent housing in our lifetimes.
Abahlali baseMjondolo of the Western Cape condemns the City of Cape Town's actions against land occupiers in the
strongest possible terms. You cannot wage war on the poor and then say that you want to negotiate with us. If you are
serious about negotiations then you must renounce violence and issue a moratorium on all evictions.
For the City of Cape Town to condemn people who occupy land is for the City of Cape Town to condemning the poor. They
are criminalising poverty. It is domination and exclusion that should be called into question. The commodification of
land and excessive wealth should be called into question. The struggles and survival strategies of the poor should be
actively supported.
It is the responsibility of the City of Cape Town, like any other city, to provide houses to the poor. All progressive
cities recognise that land occupations have an important social function. For as long as people do not have houses it is
essential that the occupation of unused land must be supported by the City.
We would like to dismiss the claims by the City of Cape Town that people who occupy land they want to jump the housing
waiting list. The same thing is said all over South Africa. In most places the housing list is a fiction. It does not
exist and is just a lie that is told to keep the poor in order. In Cape Town the housing waiting list that they talk
about is totally disfunctional. It has been used a political tool by the City of Cape Town to incite division between
poor people, and amongst Africans and coloureds.
We call on the City of Cape Town to support all efforts by poor people to move this city forward by respecting and
supporting people centered processes such creating communities from below. We insist that the City of Cape Town stop
initiating war against the poor. There must be no more Hangbergs, no more Taflesigs and no more Symphony Ways.
We call on the City of Cape Town to provide all relevant basic services to those who build their own structures on
unused land. Furthermore the city must also provide technical support to people who occupy the land by working with the
communities to ensure that people do not build close too each other and that enough space is left for emergency vehicles
such as fire fighters and ambulances. This will also ensures that it becomes much easier for the city to upgrade the
area at a later stage.
Land occupations are not the crisis in Cape Town. The crisis is poverty, homelessness, exclusion, state violence and
TRAs. Land occupations can be a small part of the solution to this crisis.
Now that the City of Cape Town has admitted that they cannot house the people of Cape Town they have no right to stop us
from occupying land housing ourselves.
Our invitation to the Mayor to work with us in establishing democratic people's forums at the community level remains
open. These forums need to be neutral in terms of party politics and not dominated by any political parties as remains
the case with all relevant structures set by City of Cape Town such as ward development forums. They need to be bottom
up and not top down spaces.
The Poor People's Alliance: Abahlali baseMjondolo, together with with Landless People's Movement (Gauteng), the Rural
Network (KwaZulu-Natal) and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign, is part of the Poor People's Alliance - an unfunded
national network of democratic membership based poor people's movements.
For more, please visit the website of the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign at:
www.antieviction.org.za and follow us on www.twitter.com/antieviction
Visit Abahlali baseMjondolo at www.abahlali.org and www.khayelitshastruggles.com
ENDS