The Citizen (Gauteng)

Army evictees sue for contempt

VILLAGERS: LIVE IN SQUALOR, DESPITE COURT ORDER

- Ilse de Lange ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Army was told to give them back homes or provide proper alternativ­e housing.

Abid by a group of civilians who were violently evicted from their homes at the Marievale military training base near Nigel last year to have the defence minister, the chief of the army and the commander of the base jailed for contempt of court will only proceed later this week.

The group wants the High Court in Pretoria to send Mapisa-Nqakula, chief of the army Lindile Yam and the commanding officer of army support base at Marievale, Colonel Mafihlwase Mkhize to jail for 120 days unless the defence force complies with a court order allowing them to return to their homes or to provide them with proper alternativ­e housing, and to interdict military staff from harassing or intimidati­ng them.

They will also ask the court to issue warrants for the arrest of the top brass, suspended for a year on condition they comply with the court order.

Although the minister insisted in court papers she had given the chief of the SANDF and Military Command instructio­ns to comply with the court order and could not be personally held liable for any contempt, the villagers accused her of not appreciati­ng her responsibi­lities as a minister and of gross derelictio­n of her duties.

Judge Norman Davis granted the order in May after the villagers, with the help of Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) took the SANDF to court for evicting them without a court order.

Most now live in squalor in a makeshift shanty town they cynically refer to as “Happiness Village”

The shanty town the evicted residents now live in is cynically referred to as ‘Happiness Village’.

Lawyers for Human Rights

without sanitation, electricit­y or running water.

LHR lawyer said they remained displaced and continued to live in precarious conditions, despite the court order, and some still complained of being harassed and intimidate­d by military staff.

All of the homes formerly occupied by the evicted residents were apparently allocated to members of the SANDF shortly after the judgment and the SANDF then offered alternativ­e accommodat­ion to the community in the form of two open bungalows with no privacy or cooking facilities and with limited ablution facilities. –

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