The Independent on Saturday

Land invasion order

Court instructs parties’ lawyers to resolve conflicts

- DUNCAN GUY

THE Durban High Court yesterday asked legal teams involved in the dispute between shack dwellers and authoritie­s to come to an agreement between themselves over land invasions affecting areas around Durban.

Judge Mohini Moodley postponed the case until further notice.

She told advocates representi­ng Abahlali baseMjondo­lo on the one hand and the eThekwini Municipali­ty, and the provincial Department of Human Settlement­s on the other, that they should “put a structured arrangemen­t in place to allow people residing in shack areas to continue to enjoy protection from eviction without a court order”.

The municipali­ty and the provincial department filed replying papers arguing that an interim interdict protecting named shack dwellers from evictions without a court order, should not be made permanent.

A number of named shack dwellers, in seven informal settlement­s around Durban, have been protected by the ruling since July.

The judge added that the lawyers’ agreement should also allow the MEC to exercise her rights and for any removals to be done in a safe way.

While court proceeding­s were under way, protesters supporting the shack dwellers demonstrat­ed on Margaret Mncadi Avenue (formerly Victoria Embankment) with only the south-bound traffic between them and a smaller gathering of people from formal residentia­l areas who have been at odds with them. The latter crowd had withdrawn by lunch time.

While this conflict has happened in Bonela, Cato Manor and Mariannrid­ge, the applicatio­n was specific to the Bonela area, adjacent to Blinkbonni­e Road, which forms a green lung for an establishe­d residentia­l area.

The Bonela clash saw shack dwellers and alleged land-grabbers rampage through the streets, smashing residents’ water meters, blocking roads with concrete and burning tyres. Some also threatened to petrol-bomb houses.

Terrified residents cowered in their homes, shots were fired in the area and police eventually responded to restore order.

For Abahlali baseMjondo­lo, the court proceeding­s were a relief.

“We always win in court, now it’s up to the politician­s to not violate the court order,” said organisati­on representa­tive, Ndabo Mzimela.

However, Sham Dhanpaul, from the Moorton Community Policing Forum, one of the affected areas, called the outcome of yesterday’s proceeding­s “unacceptab­le”.

“The shacks will go up on a daily basis,” he said.

“All evidence that a forest was once there is slowly being cut up and burnt.”

 ??  ?? GATHERING: It was Abahlali baseMjondo­lo versus Bonela residents outside the Durban High Court as the court interdict dispute between eThekwini Metro and Abahlali representa­tives went on inside. PICTURE: GCINA NDWALANE
GATHERING: It was Abahlali baseMjondo­lo versus Bonela residents outside the Durban High Court as the court interdict dispute between eThekwini Metro and Abahlali representa­tives went on inside. PICTURE: GCINA NDWALANE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa