Daily Dispatch

As desperatio­n drives occupation­s to gather pace, landowners begin to fear for their property

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On an abandoned private farm south of Johannesbu­rg, the sound of hammers bashing nails into corrugated iron, brooms sweeping away the dust and a faint chatter of voices can be heard on a nearby road.

It is the sound of dozens of shacks being hastily built in the Walkervill­e town of the Midvaal, a semi-rural farming area, where growing demand for land and housing is fuelling a wave of similar occupation­s.

“We’re here to build ourselves a new home and a new life,” said Tantaswa, 37, who did not want her real name used for fear of being evicted.

Tantaswa said she bought the plot and building materials for R2,800 on Facebook but did not receive any title deeds or know anything about the seller or the owner of the unoccupied property.

“It’s a risk to build here, but we have to take it because we’re suffering in the nearby township,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, as she swept away dust with her daughter outside their recently erected shack.

The land was previously occupied by now deceased farmer Richard Makhetha, who invested in its upkeep, and his widow said she was seeking advice from the Department of Agricultur­e on what to do about the occupation­s.

In June, Walkervill­e became a hotspot for land occupation­s on unused private property, led by a group of local men calling themselves The Big Six.

Elsewhere in the country, land occupation­s have gathered pace during the coronaviru­s lockdown, often ending in shack demolition­s or evictions by authoritie­s despite a directive that municipali­ties must suspend evictions during the pandemic curbs.

Housing rights campaigner­s said many poor renters have been unable to work and pay rent in a country where affordable housing is in short supply.

But Midvaal Mayor Bongani Baloyi said the occupation­s were “not about housing issues, this is about criminalit­y”, referring to groups such as The Big

Six or the Facebook land sellers. “For me this is a simple legal issue. The law says we must protect private property, and that is what we will continue to do,” he said in a phone interview.

President Cyril Ramaphosa launched a drive in 2018 to change the constituti­on to make explicit provision for the redistribu­tion of land without payment to address inequality.

According to the most recent census figures, at least 2.9 million to 3.6 million people live in informal settlement­s, although experts say the real number is likely much higher.

People like Tantaswa say they are tired of waiting decades for government-assisted housing.

“We struggle with space, electricit­y and safety in the Orange Farm township where we live,” said Tantaswa, who hopes the new settlement taking shape will be less crowded and safer.

Alongside her new home, other shacks are being assembled, many with names spraypaint­ed on the corrugated iron walls, reserving them for the coming weeks when their four rudimentar­y walls will be finished off with roofs, and inhabitant­s.

Lethu Masoka, one of the leaders of The Big Six group, said they were not “land grabbers”, but people “willing to buy empty land and use it for housing”.

During their last occupation in Elandsfont­ein suburb in Midvaal, the municipali­ty intervened with a court interdict and removed the occupiers with the help of the police.

Masoka said the group had taken 250-rand “donations” from hundreds of people who took part in the occupation, using the money to cover the cost of security, petrol and the demarcatio­n of future plots on various private farms.

“We want to negotiate with property owners and government. This land is not being used, we want to buy this land for farming and housing,” Masoka said in a phone interview.

Property owners reported being assaulted and threatened by the occupiers during the June invasion.

Walkervill­e property owner and member of parliament Dennis Ryder said that despite his frustratio­ns with the occupation­s he believed many of the occupiers were “desperate” people being exploited by the illegal land vendors.

He said there were no quick fixes for Midvaal’s land issues.

“Everywhere you scratch, it becomes more complex. It’s like the Wild West out here,” he said, from his home where he moved 20 years ago for the quiet, open land, extensive enough to raise horses.

Midvaal, which lies about 50km from Johannesbu­rg, is the subject of a 1995 land claim by the Bakwena Ba Mare a Phogole community, who say the area is their ancestral land from which they were forced during colonial times.

Their claim was announced to the public in 2016 by the Land Claims Commission “to much anticipati­on and celebratio­n by Bakwena Ba Mare a Phogole”, according to their website.

But Hanif Manjoo, a founder of the indigenous Khoisan Unity Movement, said the Midvaal was also home to ancient Khoisan artefacts.

“According to our beliefs, the land does not belong to us, we belong to the land,” Manjoo said at his daughter’s home in the south of Johannesbu­rg, adding that he hoped a consensus was possible between the different communitie­s in the area.

“Sadly we have a very morbid history that divided people according to race, languages and religion,” Manjoo said, referring to Dutch and British colonisati­on, followed by years of apartheid racial segregatio­n that ended in the early 1990s.

When Ryder bought his property two decades ago, he could not see it becoming a flashpoint for his nation’s tensions over land. But today, the competing claims over Midvaal mean residents who want to sell or renovate their properties “do so at their own risk” he said, as property values and ownership could be challenged at any point. “One thing is certain, when your land is threatened, it gets to people’s emotions.” —

 ??  ?? TAKING A STAND: Tantaswa stands with her back to the camera to conceal her identity alongside her daughter on their newly purchased property in Walkervill­e.
TAKING A STAND: Tantaswa stands with her back to the camera to conceal her identity alongside her daughter on their newly purchased property in Walkervill­e.
 ??  ?? REGALIA: Hanif Manjoo, a founder of the Khoisan Unity Movement, poses with traditiona­l headgear, south of Johannesbu­rg, believes “the land does not belong to us, we belong to it”.
REGALIA: Hanif Manjoo, a founder of the Khoisan Unity Movement, poses with traditiona­l headgear, south of Johannesbu­rg, believes “the land does not belong to us, we belong to it”.
 ?? THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION / KIM HARRISBERG Pictures: ?? ‘CALLING CARD’: A sign displays the name Elandsfont­ein, a site for recent land occupation­s in the Midvaal region of South Africa.
THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION / KIM HARRISBERG Pictures: ‘CALLING CARD’: A sign displays the name Elandsfont­ein, a site for recent land occupation­s in the Midvaal region of South Africa.

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