Cape Argus

Makhaza residents clash with police

Shack dwellers were left out in the cold after the City evicted them

- Okuhle Hlati

SOME Makhaza residents slept in the cold rain on Sunday night after their shacks were demolished by the City of Cape Town. The shacks were erected on city-owned land and thus were illegal. Law enforcemen­t officers were asked to accompany the contractor­s employed to remove the structures.

But after the officers left, many residents simply rebuilt on the land.

Yesterday, there were violent clashes between the residents of the Khayelitsh­a tract of land and law enforcemen­t officers.

Residents burnt debris in the road and stoned a law enforcemen­t vehicle. They said they had nowhere else to go. Simphiwe Mahlabedlu­la, 31, said the residents had no choice but to stay on the land. “There are elderly people who rely on grant money. They cannot afford to pay rent. And people who do not have relatives to go to, where are they suppose to go?”

According to Nobongile Gojana, a pensioner, she slept outside in the rain on Sunday night with her four-year-old grandson and 36-year-old daughter.

She said they had not been informed of the pending eviction and had been caught off guard on Sunday morning. “We are dissatisfi­ed because we were not aware that the land we settled in was not approved by our councillor, Danile Khatshwa.

“My daughter and I are currently unemployed. We cannot afford to pay rent and we have nowhere else to go. Even if we did have a place to sleep, our furniture and some of the undamaged material was going to be stolen.

“So we slept outside and it rained. Bear in mind I am sick and my furniture is soaking wet.”

Khwatsha said on Sunday that he told the residents to go back to where they had come from before settling on the land.

Mayco member for Informal Settlement­s, Water and Energy Xanthea Limberg said the occupants, “most of whom were backyard dwellers from surroundin­g areas” were there illegally as the land was owned by the City.

“The City do not deem these community members as being homeless because many were residing in backyard structures in the surroundin­g areas of Makhaza.

“The occupation of land without formal consent from the owner, which in this case is the City of Cape Town, is an offence.

“The City does, however, provide housing opportunit­ies for indigent residents. The formal process to access potential housing opportunit­ies is managed through the City’s housing database.

“All suitable vacant land is for future developmen­ts.”

‘THERE ARE ELDERLY PEOPLE WHO RELY ON GRANT MONEY… SO WHERE ARE THEY SUPPOSED TO GO?’

 ?? PICTURE: HENK KRUGER ?? BURNING ISSUE: Angry residents block the road with burning tyres along Japhta K Masemola Road in Khayelitsh­a. According to Metro Police, people occupying the land illegally are unhappy about their informal structures being broken down.
PICTURE: HENK KRUGER BURNING ISSUE: Angry residents block the road with burning tyres along Japhta K Masemola Road in Khayelitsh­a. According to Metro Police, people occupying the land illegally are unhappy about their informal structures being broken down.

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