Daily Dispatch

Scenes of homes destroyed will live long in my memory

A story like this, when a seemingly uncaring authority plunges a community into crisis and despair, hits you in the gut

- BHONGO JACOB bhongoj@dispatch.co.za

A fortnight ago I watched people’s homes being destroyed and old people weeping. Their dazed grandchild­ren were too shocked to move.

The scenes that unfolded at the state-owned Greydell farm in Bhongweni near East London Airport will live long in my memory.

People who had waited years for RDP houses decided to occupy the land in January 2018, but 18 months later the sheriff of the court’s office executed eviction and demolition notices in terms of a court order.

Despite a bitter winter chill and a freeze on evictions during lockdown under the national

I really don’t know where to go from here. They have destroyed my shack, and they have destroyed my friends too

state of disaster, the action went ahead.

Hundreds of people gathered in the streets watching two TLBs tear down 77 houses, shacks and temporary structures.

As journalist­s we often need to interview hurt and angry people.

On this occasion, homeowners were hurling insults at authoritie­s, and it was no easy task getting them to talk to me, such was their rage.

It quickly became clear that people were either given the wrong informatio­n or were in the dark about the status of the land.

Some residents said they were sold plots — a claim denied by the Airport Park Committee, a group set up to represent the community.

Getting informatio­n from the government was much more difficult — which, given the seriousnes­s of the situation, is just unacceptab­le.

I was sent from pillar to post, from one communicat­ions officer to another.

It took the national department of public works a week to respond to the most basic questions about the matter.

Against a backdrop of some of the people whose homes were demolished testing positive for

Covid-19, the thought that the government no longer cared for its people crossed my mind more than once.

These people had to seek refuge with friends and neighbours, sending the chances skyhigh of the virus spreading to their kind hosts.

It was devastatin­g to watch people not knowing where they would sleep when darkness fell or where their next meal would come.

One young man held his hands against his head as he stood amid his belongings, which were strewn around him.

“I really don’t know where to go from here. They have destroyed my shack, and they have destroyed my friends’ too,” he told me, barely managing to get the words out.

The government defends the removals, stating it was acting on an eviction order from 2017.

But the irony is not lost on me that if the government had done its job and provided these people with homes in the first place, this tragedy would never have happened.

The patience these residents displayed in waiting for homes — some have been on waiting lists since 1994 — was not returned by the people who are supposed to represent them.

A story like this hits you in the gut, no question.

And it is a reminder that, as journalist­s, we should hold people to account when we find despair.

 ?? Picture: MARK ANDREWS ?? HEARTBREAK­ING: Complete and unfinished housing structures at Ententeni, behind the EL Airport, were demolished in June.
Picture: MARK ANDREWS HEARTBREAK­ING: Complete and unfinished housing structures at Ententeni, behind the EL Airport, were demolished in June.

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