Cape Argus

Resistance walk against new Amazon developmen­t

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

THE Salt River Heritage Society, Observator­y Civic, Oude Molen Eco Village, Iziko Museum, Goringhaic­ona Khoi Khoi Indigenous Traditiona­l Council, and about 100 citizens took part in a resistance walk, to voice their opposition to the Amazon developmen­t in Liesbeek River, on Freedom Day.

The aim of the Resistance Walk was to honour the history of the indigenous footprint of the area and the first land grab on the banks of the Liesbeek River in 1657, by reinstatin­g the commemorat­ive plaque that has been severely vandalised over time.

ANC MPL Faiez Jacobs participat­ed in the event and said that the area’s applicatio­n for national heritage site status needed to be transparen­t.

“This was public land before it was sold for peanuts to the private sector. It should be given back to the public as a national heritage site, the status that it deserves. We want to voice our opposition to the developmen­t of a new Amazon plant on sacred, cultural land, here where the two rivers meet.

“I am calling for transparen­cy from the Western Cape government about the Amazon developmen­t and demand land expropriat­ion without compensati­on for the area,” said Jacobs.

Tauriq Jenkins, high commission­er of the Goringhaic­ona Khoi Khoi Traditiona­l and Indigenous Council, said there was a deep solidarity and sense of united communitie­s at the walk.

“Khoi leadership, together with diverse communitie­s, paved a new chapter of a shared resistance against greed,” he said.

 ??  ?? SEVERAL associatio­ns embarked on a ‘walk of resistance’ on Freedom Day to register their opposition to the multibilli­on-rand River Club Developmen­t in the Two Rivers Urban Park.
SEVERAL associatio­ns embarked on a ‘walk of resistance’ on Freedom Day to register their opposition to the multibilli­on-rand River Club Developmen­t in the Two Rivers Urban Park.

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