Cape Times

Bo-Kaap protest to continue

- FRANCESCA VILLETTE francesca.villette@inl.co.za

BO-KAAP residents have not given up their quest to preserve the area’s heritage and will continue with demonstrat­ions in coming weeks, said Bo-Kaap Collective member Safwaan Laubscher.

At the same time an online petition to block gentrifica­tion – Save our Bo Kaap, Save our African Heritage, Stop all Developmen­ts – sent to mayor Dan Plato is gaining momentum with more than 21000 signatures by last night.

Laubscher said they had not heard from property developer Blok since last week’s protests, and neither had ward councillor Brandon Golding consulted with the residents.

Golding did not respond to requests for comment from the Cape Times.

Last week, four people were arrested in Bo-Kaap following a demonstrat­ion against gentrifica­tion in the area that turned violent when police used stun grenades to disperse the crowds.

Laubscher said they were still busy consulting lawyers to deal with cases of police brutality.

The demonstrat­ion was in relation to two cranes attempting to enter Lion Street to continue constructi­on of Blok’s apartments.

The property developer purchased the site in March last year and the City approved the developmen­t of 56 residentia­l units.

In July Blok asked the court to interdict, among others, Bo-Kaap Youth Movement and “all other persons trespassin­g” from entering erf 2970, but later withdrew this. They filed for another interdict earlier this month.

Laubscher said they were consulting their lawyer to prepare for the court case expected in the Western Cape High Court on December 6.

WHEN the state collaborat­ed with the wealthy against indigenous workers, we used to have a name for it. That collaborat­ion was the essence of apartheid. A people who had lived for centuries in an area were forced out, their way of living and their community were uprooted, and the state was proud of what was happening. And this happened across our country.

Today, two separate communitie­s, and their separate but similar struggles, put this collaborat­ion in my mind. The first is the Protea Village community, whom I represente­d during part of their long struggle to reclaim their ancestral homes. The second is the Bo-Kaap community.

Both were slaves in the Cape of Good Hope. Both became part of our national heritage. Both have had to resist the dark forces of colonialis­m, apartheid, greed and rampant capitalism.

The Protea Village community will – more than half a century later than is right – be re-establishe­d, thanks to our democratic dispensati­on. The Bo-Kaap community remain threatened with cultural genocide despite it.

Protea Village lay in the area of Bishop’s Court and Kirstenbos­ch. The community built the Church of the Good Shepherd; many of them lie in its graveyard. In the 1950s the village was declared a white group area and they were forced out.

The Constituti­on and Restitutio­n of Land Act made it possible for some survivors and descendant­s of the community to apply for restitutio­n of their land in 1995.

But thanks to some affluent residents of Bishop’s Court who didn’t want those sort of people as neighbours, they only received their land last year, after 22 needless years of struggle. By the time the community triumphed, very few original residents were still alive.

The Bo-Kaap community, conversely, were never removed by law. Even now, it is argued, they are not being removed. But higher property prices, resulting in higher rates, are forcing them out. It is a cruel irony for this community that, unlike so many others, their right to remain in their homes was protected by apartheid (the Bo-Kaap was designated a Malay area under the Group Areas Act).

More recently, an influx of developers and the well-heeled has “art-washed” the area. Some of the area has been rezoned as commercial space. As a result, financial forces are pushing lifelong residents out of the city.

This occurs at the exact same time as national policy is to develop affordable housing to move those previously forced out of the city back in. Yet the state, perversely, stands on the side of the bulldozers and the cranes against the residents. Police use stun grenades to subdue community protest.

There is a distinctio­n to be drawn between the Group Areas Act and the forces of unchecked capitalism. Of course there is. But in this case the results are the same.

A people who have lived as a community for hundreds of years are being forced out against their will. The forces of capital will always claim that they are a natural process, like a lightning strike or a melting icecap. The architects of apartheid also argued that what they were

doing was simply upholding the laws of nature. The powerful always claim that their power is the natural way of things.

It is easier to fight when the agents of evil can be identified, when you can point to those responsibl­e and say “You did this”. It is harder when the enemy – capital – is amorphous. Still, the question is really quite simple. Is our society designed to look after people and the communitie­s in which they live, and in which they have always lived, or does it exist to serve those who can afford to buy? And should the state be on the side of those with money, or on the side of those who need its help and protection? To me the answer is obvious.

 ?? PHANDO JIKELO African News Agency (ANA) ?? THE historic Bo-Kaap area has been rocked by protests as residents call for an end to gentrifica­tion and demand the area’s heritage be preserved. |
PHANDO JIKELO African News Agency (ANA) THE historic Bo-Kaap area has been rocked by protests as residents call for an end to gentrifica­tion and demand the area’s heritage be preserved. |
 ?? | David Ritchie African News Agency (ANA) ?? BO-KAAP residents recently protested against property developers in the area who they believe are entrenchin­g gentrifica­tion and eroding their heritage.
| David Ritchie African News Agency (ANA) BO-KAAP residents recently protested against property developers in the area who they believe are entrenchin­g gentrifica­tion and eroding their heritage.
 ?? MICHAEL DONEN ??
MICHAEL DONEN

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