Cape Argus

STRANDFONT­EIN HOMELESS... A YEAR LATER (PART TWO OF THREE)

- CARLOS MESQUITA

A NUMBER of people have asked: “Why rehash the past? Strandfont­ein is old news.”

I have decided to relive this experience by publishing it in this column for two reasons.

First – at the time, we had no voice. The informatio­n that came out of Strandfont­ein was second-hand.

Second – it’s all but finished for those of us who lived that hell and continue living in fear of landing up back on the streets.

We are still feeling the effects both of Strandfont­ein and what has happened afterwards.

Another popular question was: “But shouldn’t you be glad about Strandfont­ein, look how it’s changed your life?”

My argument has always been that these changes, good and bad, were as a result of choices we made in how we chose to handle a horrible situation, not as a consequenc­e of the so-called services that were meant to be offered at Strandfont­ein but weren’t.

The intention might have been there, but the reality is far removed from the narrative.

Dr Zahid Badroodien, the Mayco member under whom social developmen­t and the homelessne­ss fall, and I have had numerous discussion­s about this. Dr Badroodien and I have gone from disliking each other immensely during Strandfont­ein and immediatel­y thereafter, to respecting and and even liking one another (I hope) when we finally did meet and opened ourselves up to forming a working relationsh­ip.

We seem to share enough common ground to be able to work on a vision whereby we will not only reduce but eventually end chronic homelessne­ss in Cape Town. The one thing, however, that we will never agree on, is Strandfont­ein.

I lived in Strandfont­ein, Dr Badroodien reported on it.

Dr Badroodien spent all of 12 minutes one day at tent number two, where I, along with the other members of the Strandfont­ein Homeless Action Committee (Shac), were accommodat­ed.

The other informatio­n he used to substantia­te the statements and claims he made at the time came second-hand from the City staff who were on site. Unfortunat­ely, people in his position will want to accept that the informatio­n from their staff is accurate. We didn’t have access to him to correct him when he made those often offensive statements pertaining to the committee and anyone who assisted us in getting our message out.

One of the other popular questions posed was: “How do you and Dr Badroodien now get along?”

The other popular question was what have I been doing since Strandfont­ein, except for my column, and what do I still want to do?

This past Sunday was a milestone day.

After what I have described as a “difficult pregnancy”, our aim to establish a new body for the homeless sector, which would replace the Street People’s Forum (SPF) and for the first time ever include homeless and re-homed individual­s, was finally birthed as Melene Rossouw of the Women Lead Movement acted as my midwife, as she facilitate­d the process of representa­tives of Shac and the SPF coming together to iron out the constituti­on for a body to be known as the Homeless Action Coalition.

The other project which we have been working on, the Rehoming Collective, which will work towards new and dignified ways of homing the homeless, has also been registered and is in the process of board selection.

With the final meeting to discuss the recommenda­tions that will be included in the much-anticipate­d Inkathalo Conversati­ons Report being held today as you read this, we come to the end of yet another phase in the lives of the individual­s who on a day in April, in Strandfont­ein, said: enough is enough.

To be continued ...

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