Kuwait Times

‘We have nowhere’: S Africa’s landless vent their fury

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KHAYELITSH­A, South Africa: “I’ve waited for a government house for 21 years,” complained Andiswa, a 45-year-old mother of three. She and around 200 other destitute, frustrated families have taken over a plot of land outside Cape Town, where they have erected ramshackle shelters they now call home. Illegal land seizures of this kind have surged in recent months, overwhelmi­ng police. With an eye on nationwide elections next year, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party has vowed to accelerate land reform in favor of the country’s black majority who were systematic­ally disenfranc­hised under apartheid.

To restore “dignity” to impoverish­ed black voters, the government has promised a political watershed for South Africa - to expropriat­e land without compensati­on. To the political left of the ANC sits the radical Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party. It has gone further than the ANC, calling for poor and landless South Africans to forcibly seize land - a potentiall­y dangerous call to arms in a country still bitterly divided along racial and economic lines.

Andiswa, 45, was interviewe­d inside her tiny, windowless shack, built on the fringes of the sprawling Khayelitsh­a township about 35 km from central Cape Town. Like others who spoke to AFP on this highly sensitive issue, she insisted that her family name be withheld. “We are born here. Where can we go? We have nowhere,” said Andiswa. “We don’t have jobs. We have nothing.” In the first four months of the year, the city of Cape Town has been gripped by a wave of protests over land. The city’s anti-land invasion squad has responded robustly, destroying illegal structures and illicit demarcatio­n markers erected on squatted land.

In 2017, 15,000 illicit structures and markers were removed, compared to 26,000 so far this year. Among them, Andiswa’s tumble-down home as well as those of her neighbors, which were hit three times in a matter of months. After each clearance, the displaced families gather together their things and rebuild their shacks in the same location with dented corrugated plastic, old wooden boards and faded fabric. “They say we must not take land but they don’t build us houses,” said Andiswa. “(The ANC) promised to give us houses but it was empty promises. They are just feeding themselves.”

A quarter of a century after the end of apartheid, authoritie­s have built 4.3 million social housing units but the demand remains enormous as millions of black South Africans still wait for decent shelter. Eleven million families, 95 percent of whom are black, live in poverty and their frustratio­n is spilling into the open. In April a desperate father threw his baby from the roof of an illegally-constructe­d structure as police prepared to level it.

 ?? — AFP ?? KHAYELITSH­A, South Africa: People go about with their daily life among shacks built with sheets of metals in this makeshift illegally establishe­d and informal settlement on May 17, 2018.
— AFP KHAYELITSH­A, South Africa: People go about with their daily life among shacks built with sheets of metals in this makeshift illegally establishe­d and informal settlement on May 17, 2018.

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