Cape Argus

Mom, disabled son evicted

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

BOLAND ANC Women’s League co-ordinator, Gladys Bakubaku-Vos, is calling for urgent interventi­on in the case of a mother of five and her disabled son who have been asked to leave an abandoned municipal building classed as unfit for human occupation.

Bakubaku-Vos said Nomamapond­omise Cynthia Bless, 53, and her son Walter Manjiya, who uses a wheelchair, moved into the building in desperatio­n after spending more than 20 years on the municipali­ty’s housing waiting list.

Bakubaku-Vos said: “Bless, who was evicted from where she was staying with her family, found refuge in an abandoned municipal building that has been vacant since 2018.

“The heartless Witzenberg municipali­ty has opted to evict the family from the building instead of assisting them to find alternativ­e accommodat­ion. It is especially bad given that there is a disabled person involved.

“The ANCWL calls on the provincial government and other relevant authoritie­s to urgently intervene in the case of Mrs Bless, and for the South African Human Rights Commission to investigat­e the treatment of the family by the law enforcemen­t officers and the Witzenberg municipali­ty, which even hired a security company to torment the family.”

Bakubaku-Vos welcomed the fact that ANC Human Settlement­s spokespers­on Andile Lili had taken up the matter in the legislatur­e by asking Human Settlement­s MEC Tertuis Simmers to explain why the family had not been given a home despite having applied for a subsidised house in 1991.

Simmers said that Bless was the recipient of a housing subsidy approved by his department on September 1, 2020, for the Vredebes Housing Project in Ceres, but the house still had to be built.

In a written response to Lili, Simmers said the department had been in touch with the Witzenberg municipali­ty for answers.

According to Witzenberg municipal manager David Nasson, Bless had moved into the abandoned building which had been damaged and looted during a protest march and began refurbishi­ng it by replacing roof panels and window frames.

It was this action of moving into the abandoned municipal building and beginning constructi­on work that led to the council dispatchin­g its law enforcemen­t unit to the premises where they removed the roof panels and window frames that Bless had installed.

Law enforcemen­t then told Bless to leave the premises and filed a complaint of trespassin­g at the Ceres police station.

Explaining why Bless was still on the waiting list, Nasson said: “At the time of the approval of the project, the single and semi-attached dwellings were already occupied or allocated in terms of the establishe­d criteria and the only available housing was the duplex dwellings.

“Due to the disability of Mrs Bless’s son, the council’s housing committee was of the opinion that it would not be practical and feasible to allocate a duplex dwelling to her and instead she should be given priority at the first available single dwelling.”

Nasson said the matter had been referred to the municipali­ty’s housing committee on an urgent basis for further considerat­ion and discussion.

 ??  ?? A MOTHER of five and her disabled son have been asked to leave this abandoned municipal building in Witzenberg Municipali­ty in Ceres because it is classed as unfit for human occupation.
A MOTHER of five and her disabled son have been asked to leave this abandoned municipal building in Witzenberg Municipali­ty in Ceres because it is classed as unfit for human occupation.

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