Cape Times

New public participat­ion survey for D6 claimants

- OKUHLE HLATI okhule.hlati@inl.co.za

THE Western Cape Standing Committee on Human Settlement­s has resolved to start a new Public Participat­ion Survey to collect data from the disgruntle­d District 6 community over ongoing delays faced by land claimants.

More than five months later, 108 families who were expected to move into the Phase 3 project on Hanover Street are still waiting to relocate, with no time frames provided.

The District Six Working Committee (D6WC) which took the Department of Rural Developmen­t and Land Reform to court over the slow process for claimants, also recently indicated it would be putting further legal pressure on government to speed up the matter.

The department was ordered to issue quarterly progress reports following a 2019 court judgment obtained against them by the D6WC.

The next court-mandated update is due tomorrow.

D6WC spokespers­on Karen Breytenbac­h said the delays had become untenable.

’’The many delays we’ve seen with the current third phase of the District Six restitutio­n project over the past year are not only holding up other parties and parts of the greater restitutio­n process, but are causing grave, repeated distress to the already traumatise­d claimant community.“

“The department offered new excuses for the delays each month, ranging from the pandemic, to the weather, to constructi­on issues, administra­tive issues.

“Now they are shifting blame to the City, for reasons unknown to the D6WC.

’’Many of our claimants are in their 80s and 90s, and Mrs Shariefa Khan is 100, and they have had their suitcases packed for months. They are losing hope in the entire process. The State owes them answers, and greater respect,’’ she said.

The provincial standing committee Human Settlement­s, received a presentati­on yesterday of the public participat­ion process.

The process will be advertised through newspapers and radio, and further communicat­ed through approachin­g known District 6 community groups.

Human Settlement­s Committee chairperso­n Matlhodi Maseko said: “We have received communicat­ion from residents who have approached the Western Cape Government with the hope that the province may be able to shed some light on the time frames of when they can expect the national government to bring them home.

“Despite the Standing Committee having invited the national department multiple times to speak to the people, they have repeatedly declined the opportunit­y to give an update on the restitutio­n process.” Maseko explained they were not calling for the department to account to them, but to assist in giving answers to beneficiar­ies as they did not have any.

Department spokespers­on Reggie Ngcobo said they would meet tomorrow’s quarterly deadline.

“Every quarter we have submitted a court report as required.

“The court would have charged the minister with contempt of court already.”

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