Mail & Guardian

Spatial planning rips people

As Cape Town rapidly gentrifies, evictions are becoming common. A Sea Point resident may lose her home forever, and a youngster in Salt River has woken up to a new reality. Two people, one in Blikkiesdo­rp and the other in Wolwerivie­r, say they have no roo

- Ra’eesa Pather

It had all been building up to this moment. Thandeka Sisusa had picketed on Sea Point’s Main Road, with the ocean whispering behind her. There had been meetings with lawyers. God is with me, she told herself.

But the high court in Cape Town had made its decision. Thandeka’s stomach knotted when the judge read out the date when she would have to leave her home. And she’d have to pay the costs of the opposing counsel. Her most expensive possession is her fridge.

She still didn’t understand why she was being evicted. She lived in the maid’s quarters of a Sea Point building. But she wasn’t a domestic worker or a security guard so she had to move, her landlords argued. Maybe she was unlucky. Others who didn’t work in the building got to stay. For now.

Until three days before her deadline to pack up and go, Thandeka believed in a miracle that would allow her to stay in Sea Point. In her home.

January 9 2017 arrived. Thandeka carefully packed away the motivation­al Christian quotes stuck to her wall. The day before, her friends had helped her pack up her belongings. Some of them had bakkies to take away clothes, the bed, leftover food and the fridge. There was nothing left of hers.

Thandeka closed the door to her home for the last time.

She had always feared the worst: that she would be moved to Blikkiesdo­rp or left homeless. She’d heard about the Tin Town from her friends who sit outside the Shoprite in Sea Point. They had left Blikkies to live under streetlamp­s in Sea Point. There’s nothing there; it’s too dangerous, they told her.

Thandeka sits in a car on the way out of Sea Point. Will there be a Shoprite in the next place she lives? It’s important — the Shoprite is where she meets her friends, where she buys her food. She is a creature of habit. She’s afraid of navigating a new, unfamiliar and inhospitab­le place.

Driving away from Sea Point, she thinks about the people she knows who have also received eviction letters in the seaside neighbourh­ood. And her anger spills over at the people who handed out such letters.

“We said we’re going to be harsh now here in Sea Point. They gave us the power to be harsh,” Thandeka says.

Her voice is heavy with confidence. She says that she and others who stand to lose their homes will be “uncontroll­able”. Her tone suggests it’s a statement of fact, but in less than a month from now her feistiness will have been extinguish­ed.

The City of Cape Town hadn’t made her a formal offer to stay in Blikkies, but such is the fear and imaginatio­n of Tin Town that Thandeka immediatel­y assumed the worst: that she would have to live there. Her immediate desire is to find somewhere else where her daughter and grandchild can be safe for the night. But in the long run, she will do what she can to steer clear of Blikkiesdo­rp.

They came and erected shacks just a little way down the road in the middle of the night. Wolwerivie­r has only one main road, lined with tall blue gum trees that leave a shadowy reflection on the road.

Magdalene Minnaar is sitting comfortabl­y in her home just a few metres away. “The tent people,” she whispers conspirato­rially, “were led by a person who called himself a Khoisan king. The so-called Khoisan king said it was their land, but who made him king anyway?” she says, sitting on her couch.

In the background, her washing machine gurgles. It’s been close on two years now that people have lived in this new settlement in Wolwerivie­r and there has been much to gossip about.

The man just across the way sold his shack for at least R10000 and a few neighbours have begun renting out their shacks for R1 000 a month.

Magdalene has watched Wolwerivie­r fill up. She’s seen people try to turn their homes into spaza shops, and now she is watching an entreprene­urial housing market begin to unfold. It happens outside her shack while she listens to opera, or on her way out when she escapes for a coffee with friends far away.

But the escape is temporary and Magdalene has a reputation to repair. She was a community leader when people began moving in, but says she was ousted by the ward councillor who cherry-picked his own team of leaders. Still, she believes it’s her responsibi­lity to go to see what’s happening with this Khoisan king.

Things have worsened, she says. The overcrowdi­ng in some shacks has spread animosity. The City of Cape Town plans to develop Wolwerivie­r, and each person was given a title deed to their home when they moved in. But more shacks are needed.

Magdalene has been accused of stealing money. Some call her crazy, and others blame her for the poorly built structures in which they live.

“It’s like they think it’s me who built the structures,” she says.

She was there when the pipes were laid, and she was there when the builders came in to build the shacks. At first, she was excited. Her previous home on the Old Wolwerivie­r Farm had no running water or electricit­y.

But now she is trapped in a place where, years later, there are still no shops and no clinics nearby. She still wants to open a hair salon, but would prefer it if it could be somewhere other than here.

Magdalene still believes she is a community leader and that her job is to “set a first example”.

Wolwerivie­r is nothing like Blikkiesdo­rp. There are toilets inside shacks and it is safe for people to wander between houses. It may be isolated, but it is largely safe. In a few years’ time, however, it may become another Blikkiesdo­rp. Only this time there are no promises that it will be temporary — people here own their homes.

Already, there is something in common between the two areas: the residents don’t want newcomers. In some shacks, 11 people live together. They say they are on the housing list and each new shack that rises in Wolwerivie­r belongs to them.

If there are more new arrivals, Magdalene has one warning: “It will be war.”

No matter how busy it got, they somehow always found her. When she was appointed spokespers­on for Salt River’s Bromwell Street residents, Charnell Commando never expected that people would show up at her work, looking for her. But they did, arriving at Café Ganesh, ready to show support or ask questions, while she snuck off to hide away in the restaurant’s kitchen.

It had been a long journey. There was the court case in 2016 where the Woodstock Hub, the owners of the Bromwell cottages, took tenants to court because they had not paid rent for two years.

The tenants argued they didn’t know who to pay after the cottages were sold in 2013. The judge granted an order for them to leave Bromwell or face eviction in August.

Whereas Charnell went to court and protested at the Old Biscuit Mill, Abu Bakr Smith didn’t really know what was happening. In that time, he had managed to get a few jobs after completing matric. He hung out with friends and went to parties at different bars.

Then there was a flood of people with notebooks and cameras. It was on the television, on the radio, in newspapers. His family was being evicted.

He’d seen it happen before here in Salt River, on the edge of the Cape Town city centre. There was the man in Albert Road with his family, and Abdullah not too far away who was moved to Milnerton. Just the other week, the uncle on the corner a few roads down was also forced to leave. Now it was happening to Abu Bakr.

Luckily, the eviction had been delayed to September, and then the tenants launched a new court bid to compel the City of Cape Town to give them emergency temporary accommodat­ion closer to Salt River.

The city offered them homes in a place they’d never heard of. “They want to send us to Wolwerivie­r and that’s not in my schedule,” he says.

The image of Wolwerivie­r is like a boogeyman. He went there after hearing it could be his new home.

 ?? Photos: David Harrison ?? Far-flung: There’s not much to do in Wolwerivie­r (top) apart from kick a ball around, but at least the residents own their homes. Although it’s no paradise, it’s seen as better than grim Blikkiesdo­rp (bottom), mere mention of which strikes fear in the...
Photos: David Harrison Far-flung: There’s not much to do in Wolwerivie­r (top) apart from kick a ball around, but at least the residents own their homes. Although it’s no paradise, it’s seen as better than grim Blikkiesdo­rp (bottom), mere mention of which strikes fear in the...
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