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Police evict migrant squatters from Cape Town’s busy square

By | Eviction news, Homeless, Uncategorized

Trucks tore down structures where they had camped.

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Source: AFP

South African police on Sunday forcibly removed hundreds of migrants who had been squatting for four months on a busy Cape Town square popular with tourists.

The eviction ended months of tension between the city and the migrants who had camped on the pavements of Greenmarket Square since last year following a spate of xenophobic attacks.

Cape Town had sought an injunction after around 700 foreign nationals, mainly from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi occupied the sidewalks.

A court last month granted the city the right to enforce its bylaws which prohibit sleeping, washing, defecating or cooking on the streets.

On Sunday, police vehicles surrounded the area and hundreds of officers donning masks and gloves peacefully removed the migrants.

Trucks followed and tore down makeshift structures where they had camped.

Emotions ran high as migrants grabbed their belongs and walked away.

Some sang in defiance and shouted “where’s the rainbow nation?”, “we are not animals in a zoo” and “we are not cockroaches like you call us. God will punish you for generations.”

“People are stranded. We have nowhere to go,” said Oliver Majambu, a Congolese refugee.

Many refugees expressed anger and disappointment at the lack of alternative accommodation for them.

“Cape Town is not insensitive to the plight of the refugees, but we can simply not allow the situation to carry on unchecked, as it has had a major impact on surrounding businesses,” said JP Smith, the city official in charge of security and safety.

“We are not in a position to provide emergency shelter to the group, given the great need that exists among South Africans.”

Greenmarket Square is a tourist hotspot with hotels, restaurants and vendors selling African goods to visitors.

Since the refugees moved in, around one-third of the businesses in and around the square in the heart of the city’s business district have shut down.

Migrants had initially staged a sit-in protest at a building hosting the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the city in October, demanding to be relocated to another country.

They were evicted from that building and spent a few weeks at a church before camping at the square.

South Africa, the continent’s most industrialised economy, is a magnet for economic migrants. But they are sometimes targetted by locals who blame them for the lack of jobs.

Last year, a surge in mob attacks against foreign workers hit Johannesburg and other areas, forcing migrants to flee shelters or return home.

Source: Citizen (emphasis by SDLaw*)

SDLaw / Simon Dippenaar & Associates Inc. is a law firm, of specialised eviction lawyers in Cape Town, eviction lawyers in Johannesburg and Durban. Contact one of our eviction attorneys for help with the eviction process, evicting a tenant, or with drafting of eviction notices.

Further reading:

Wentworth residents protest in defence of woman’s forced removal

By | Uncategorized

Durban – A group of residents living in the south Durban township of Wentworth burnt tyres and debris on the road in a form of protest following an apparent eviction of a woman and her family at a block of flats on Friday.

At this stage, it is alleged that the woman and her family moved into the apartment of a previous resident who recently passed away.

When security and local authorities arrived to evict the woman, residents jumped to her defence.

They then set tyres alight, blocking off part of Austerville Drive and Goede Hoop Street.

“About 100 community members embarked in a protest action after an elderly woman was evicted  by the Sheriff of the Court after she occupied the flat illegally,” Provincial police spokesperson, Captain Nqobile Gwala, said

“They blockaded the Austerville Drive with burning tyres and rubble. The road has been cleared and police are monitoring,” Gwala said.

Residents have expressed their anger over the woman’s apparent forced removal. They are demanding that she be allowed to move into the flat as she has been living in the area for many years.

Reprinted from the Mercury News – 2020-02-21. Emphasis/links by SD Law.

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Mamelodi flat invaders defy court eviction order

By | Uncategorized

Pretoria – Despite the Department of Human Settlements having obtained a court order to evict Mamelodi backyard dwellers illegally occupying flats in Nellmapius last year, the residents have occupied more flats in the area.

Following the court order, the Red Ants pounced on the 500 illegal residents who were occupying the flats along Solomon Mahlangu Drive.

The department approached the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, yesterday in a bid to get yet another court order to evict the dwellers from the recently occupied Extension 5 flats.

Despite this, the residents yesterday vowed that they would not budge and declared “they did what needed to be done”.

They carried placards with messages clearly stating that they were not moving out, while chanting and dancing outside the court during the brief proceedings.

The case, heard in the Palace of Justice, was postponed to tomorrow.

The flats, which can be seen along Solomon Mahlangu Drive, have two bedrooms, a lounge, kitchen, toilet and shower.

And although the units are without taps or basic services such as electricity meters and running water, occupants said it was better than living in a crowded yard with parents.

Despite the eviction, they have moved back in and invaded even more flats.

One of the leaders, Sipho Malaza, yesterday said they forcefully occupied the new flats in December because they could not wait any longer for the City to allocate the houses.

In addition, he complained that Mamelodi residents were not getting first preference for the units, and that “outsiders” and people who recently registered for houses were inclined to live in them.

He said people from other provinces were occupying what rightfully belonged to the people of Mamelodi.

“We are sick and tired of the system that the department is using to allocate people into the RDP houses.

“We have been waiting for many years for their help, being promised that we will get assistance but it is not happening. Instead they are pushing corruption,” he said.

He said there were people who have been waiting for houses for almost three decades.

“There are people from 1994 who are registered to get houses, but they are still waiting, yet you have people who registered between 2009 and 2015 who have houses and we are surprised by that.

“We forcefully occupied the houses illegally because we were promised in 2016 that all the backyard dwellers would be allocated houses.”

Reprinted from iol.co.za/Pretoria News – 2020-01-15

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Further reading

Red Ants demand R10.6m for three days’ work

Evicted Durban residents say city had no court order

Evicted families stuck in Paarl caravan park for a year

Groundbreaking eviction order stops unlawful eviction with damages