The Citizen (Gauteng)

KHOISAN OUT IN THE COLD

CAMP: UNION BUILDINGS SETTLEMENT HAS BECOME A FAMILIAR SIGHT

- Rorisang Kgosana – rorisangk@citizen.co.za

Group arrive in 2018 and vow not to leave until president addresses their concerns.

It has been 17 months since the Khoisan set up camp at the Union Buildings gardens after vowing in 2018 that they would not leave until President Cyril Ramaphosa meets their demands.

The small settlement, positioned next to the giant Nelson Mandela statue, has become a common sight when walking down the steps towards the bronze effigy.

But it was eerily quiet yesterday morning. After a few minutes of calling out to King Khoisan SA, he finally stepped out of his tent to brave the cold weather in his traditiona­l wear.

“My nose is blocked now because I was trying to keep myself warm but I came out into the cold,” he told Saturday Citizen.

King Khoisan SA and his family walked to Pretoria from the Eastern Cape in November 2018.

This time, they had returned to the capital city for good after their first brief stay at the Union Buildings lawn in December 2017.

According to the king, their demand was simple – to recognise the Khoisan as the original nation and for the term “coloured” to be scrapped. But their demands continue to be ignored.

The small part of the gardens has evolved into a settlement where a hand-written “Aboriginal Embassy Informatio­n” sign is placed at what seems to be the entrance.

Red tape cordons off the three small tents and a larger makeshift tent which houses the kitchen and bathing area.

Outside the large tent is a washing line tied to wooden poles where winter clothes hang to dry. An empty fire pit is on the other side.

Since the lockdown, the group of six has been short of food since they mostly rely on donations from tourists visiting the Union Buildings. Their meals now only consisted of mielie meal, but food donations have been trickling in, said the king.

Now, they also have to face the cold weather.

He laughs as he remembers how his cold temperatur­e had puzzled a thermomete­r during a screening at his son’s school.

“I had taken my son to school and when the ladies at the gate tried to screen me, the machine gave no reading. That’s how cold I was. It kept saying error. They tried seven times all over my body but it was always error. When they used the machine on themselves, it gave a reading. But when they turned it back to me, it couldn’t work,” he said.

The cold weather is expected to continue throughout the weekend due to a cold front from the Western and Eastern Capes.

Gauteng temperatur­es will range from a minimum of -30C and reach highs of 150C, said SA Weather Service forecaster Mbavhi Maliage.

“Temperatur­es may recover a little bit from Monday, but it will still be quite chilly,” she said.

But King Khoisan SA did not seem too concerned by the cold. His main worry was the influx of people coming to visit them since the country moved down to Level 3 lockdown.

“They want to talk to us and it becomes threatenin­g,” said the king.

“Imagine if one of us gets the coronaviru­s – then it means we must all pack up

-3 0 C the predicted low in Gauteng this weekend

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 ?? Pictures: Jacques Nelles ?? BRAVING THE COLD. King Khoisan SA on the lawns of the Union Buildings in Pretoria yesterday.
Pictures: Jacques Nelles BRAVING THE COLD. King Khoisan SA on the lawns of the Union Buildings in Pretoria yesterday.

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