The Herald (South Africa)

Land invaders hire bulldozer

- Nomazima Nkosi nkosino@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

About 50 residents from across Nelson Mandela Bay have each chipped in R300 for a bulldozer to clear bushes and erect shacks for a new illegal informal settlement between Despatch and Perseveran­ce.

The group, who hope to have at least 700 new shacks set up within two years, with a school and grocery store, paid a constructi­on company R15,000 to hire the bulldozer so they could build shacks after waiting for years – some decades – for the municipali­ty to build them RDP houses.

So far, more than 20 structures have been built by the land invaders in what is now the metro’s newest informal settlement, which they refer to as “Baywest”.

Margaret Befile, 60, said the residents came from New Brighton, Kwazakhele, Joe Slovo, Veeplaas and Zwide.

Befile said the invasion was mostly for their children as they were teaching them not to rely on the municipali­ty but rather learn to be independen­t.

“We’re assisting the municipali­ty here. We went to the department of land to inquire who this land belonged to and were told this is farmland belonging to ward 52.

“We went to the department of land in Uitenhage and were told it belongs to the department of agricultur­e.

“We went to the department of agricultur­e and were told it belongs to the municipali­ty, and then we went to the deeds office because we have a business plan and an applicatio­n we want to submit.”

Befile said they wanted the owner of the land to give it over to their children because they planned to build 700 sites, a clinic, a school and a shopping complex.

“We want to meet the municipali­ty halfway. This land has been vacant for more than 50 years, yet the municipali­ty says it has plans for it.

“The municipali­ty doesn’t have the budget to build houses . . . it doesn’t even have money for infrastruc­ture.

“So we’ll meet each other halfway because it’s municipal land.

“In the meantime, we’ll hire contractor­s to instal infrastruc­ture here and after that we’ll give them the bill.”

On Wednesday, the group of mostly women were putting up poles and marking their plots while men with pangas cleared some remaining bush.

Earlier in 2018, the municipali­ty put all land evictions on hold until a policy on how to deal with the issue is drafted and adopted by the council.

Sonwabo Faku said he plans to build a house for his mother, who lives in his backyard.

Faku said they had about 50 people who contribute­d R300 each towards the bulldozer.

“We’re building 18x20m² and our roads will be 6m here because we don’t want a situation where others build bigger houses and there are problems.

“We want everyone to live on a decent plot,” he said.

Athethile Prince said he had been waiting for a house since 1996 when he first applied.

“I live in a back room with my family in Kwazakhele. It’s time I stand on my own two feet now,” Prince said.

“We’re not scared of anything because this land has been vacant for many years and the municipali­ty has constantly said it was to bridge the gap between Uitenhage and Port Elizabeth and us building here is doing just that.”

On Wednesday, DA councillor Retief Odendaal wrote to acting city manager Noxolo Nqwazi to express concern at the invasion of municipal land.

He said quite a lot of bush had already been cleared and that he was not aware that the metro planned to develop that the particular piece of land.

In e-mail correspond­ence The Herald has seen, land invasion officer Mbeko Vanqa said that, following a meeting with the metro police, the municipali­ty would only receive assistance with evictions if the necessary support was available.

The e-mail reads: “The meeting resolved that they will only assist [with] Land Invasion if we have 53 members, as indicated on the previous planning meeting.

“General [Frik] Terblanche made it clear to the meeting that he won’t sign for the operation if Land Invasion [department] cannot have the 53 members to demolish.”

Human settlement­s assistant director Thembakazi Hlela said for the municipali­ty to demolish the illegal structures, it needed two bulldozers, four trucks and 40 men.

Following a meeting with a joint team that included officials from human settlement­s, metro police, municipal security and SAPS on Wednesday afternoon, municipal spokespers­on Mthubanzi Mniki condemned the land invasion and said illegal occupation of land would not be allowed.

However, Mniki said the metro would look at all possible efforts within the law to make land available for residentia­l, business, religious and recreation­al purposes.

“Unfortunat­ely, due to the sensitivit­y of the matter we cannot give details, save to say that going forward pro-active measures to deal with land invasion will be implemente­d.

“Efforts to avail land and move people from stressed areas will also be fast-tracked.

“Communicat­ion with affected communitie­s will also be improved.”

Mniki said the municipali­ty was aware that bulldozers or excavators had been used to clear the invaded areas, and a case had been opened against the owners of the equipment.

On Wednesday afternoon, a machine was still clearing the area of bushes.

Ward 52 councillor Francois Greyling said the area was part of the Swartkops conservanc­y which was protected because of the indigenous vegetation.

He said the land was not in his ward but adjacent to it.

 ?? Pictures: FREDLIN ADRIAAN ?? ACTION PLAN: Margaret Befile, 60, is among a group of Bay residents who have taken matters into their own hands after growing tired of waiting for the municipali­ty to provide them with housing
Pictures: FREDLIN ADRIAAN ACTION PLAN: Margaret Befile, 60, is among a group of Bay residents who have taken matters into their own hands after growing tired of waiting for the municipali­ty to provide them with housing
 ??  ?? FLATTENING IT: A bulldozer clears vast tracks of land between the M19 and Uitenhage Road, where people are building shacks
FLATTENING IT: A bulldozer clears vast tracks of land between the M19 and Uitenhage Road, where people are building shacks

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa