The Mercury

Report shows city, cops failed Glebelands

- Bheki Mbanjwa

ADAMNING Public Protector report into the killings and illegal evictions at Glebelands Hostel in uMlazi found that the eThekwini municipali­ty and the SAPS failed in their duties to provide a safe environmen­t for residents of the hostel.

The report, released by Advocate Busisiwe Mkhwebane yesterday, found that actions or failure to act by the two institutio­ns in relation to the killings and living conditions at the hostel constitute­d improper conduct and maladminis­tration by the institutio­ns.

According to the report, a total of 44 people were killed at the hostel between March 2014 and June 2016 while scores of others were displaced or evicted in the violence which broke out at the hostel.

The report paints a picture of a municipali­ty that has lost control of the hostel, a situation which gave rise to internal battles by warring factions.

Maladminis­tration

One of the findings is that the municipali­ty was not in full control of the room allocation­s at the hostel, and this made it possible for groups “to usurp this function for their own benefit”.

“While officials of the municipali­ty reported that 11 380 tenants were registered on its database, the SAPS stated in its submission that the occupancy figure could have been up to 19 000, which the municipali­ty did not deny”.

The report also slammed the municipali­ty, saying there was evidence of “tardiness in implementi­ng its own hostel policy” adopted in 1998.

The hostel policy of the municipali­ty states that hostels should offer rental accommodat­ion with a “clean, healthy and secure environmen­t”.

“It is worth noting that some 18 years after it adopted the hostel policy, the municipali­ty is a long way from realising its vision for hostels,” said the report.

Turning her attention on the SAPS, Mkhwebane said the police “failed to live up to the objective to prevent, combat and investigat­e crime, to maintain public order, to protect and secure the residents of Glebelands hostel and their property and to uphold and enforce the law as required by the constituti­on”.

The public protector found that the Metro police department also failed in its role to prevent crime at the hostel and this too amounted to improper conduct and maladminis­tration.

Mkhwebane also took issue with the number of arrests and successful prosecutio­n of cases in relation to the reported murders at the hostel.

The investigat­ion was launched after a complaint was received in December 2015 from Professor Mcquoid Mason, the president of the Commonweal­th Legal Education Associatio­n.

Mason complained of the “frequent and unabated” killings and unlawful evictions at Glebelands.

The public protector also found against the KZN Department of Social Developmen­t, saying it failed to fulfil its responsibi­lity to the victims of the hostel violence.

Responding to the public protector, the Social Developmen­t MEC, Weziwe Thusi, asked that the department be afforded three months to implement its interventi­ons, including offering a variety of services to victims and survivors of the violence.

The MEC stated that disciplina­ry action was instituted against managers believed to have failed to execute their duties in relation to Glebelands.

Some of the remedial actions recommende­d are that the eThekwini municipali­ty should compile a database of all people either evicted or displaced from the hostels, and in the event that these residents cannot be returned to their rooms, alternativ­e accommodat­ion be provided to them.

It is recommende­d that the city implement access control and municipal services including refuse removal, improving of lighting and maintenanc­e of the grounds should be extended to the hostel.

eThekwini mayor Zandile Gumede and acting provincial commission­er of the SAPS, Major-General Bheki Langa, were given 30 days to provide an action plan with regards to the implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions.

Asked for comment yesterday, eThekwini spokespers­on Tozi Mthethwa said the city will “study the report and respond to the public protector”.

The SAPS said: “Most of the public protector’s suggestion­s have been implemente­d.”

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