The Citizen (Gauteng)

Hitmen stalk

MOVEMENT FOR THE LANDLESS:

- Eric Naki

Founded in 2005 to fight for the rights of the poor, especially in informal settlement­s.

Civic leader S’bu Zikode is in “exile” in his own country, in hiding for the second time in as many years. The president of the Durban-based shack-dwellers movement, Abahlali baseMjondo­lo, and some of its other leaders live in constant fear as many of them have been gunned down over the years for standing for the rights of shack-dwellers and landless people in eThekwini and the surrounds.

Zikode fears he too may be murdered. He first received death threats and went into hiding in 2009 when Abahlali members were attacked by ANC members and driven out of Kennedy Road informal settlement. This was after he had been involved in a strange car accident, which the State Security Agency later confirmed was a hit.

Abahlali baseMjondo­lo, which is unaffiliat­ed to any political party, was founded in 2005 to fight for the rights of the poor, especially those in informal settlement­s in the eThekwini area. It now has branches in Gauteng, Western Cape, Mpumalanga and Eastern Cape.

The organisati­on’s activists have been involved in running battles with the eThekwini metro municipali­ty after they accused it of failing to deliver services to the poor, especially regarding the allocation of houses.

“We have had credible reports from sources, including in the ANC and the police, that S’bu Zikode is in imminent danger of assassinat­ion. Once again, he has had to go undergroun­d.

“For some time now he has been in a secret location,” said Thapelo Mohapi, Abahlali general secretary.

Mohapi said he did not fear being attacked or killed. “I don’t mind my name being used in public, they know me and where I am. I am dead anyway. I am always being targeted,” he said.

He said their leaders and activists had been attacked, and some killed, by hitmen allegedly hired by metro police, anti-land invasion unit members attached to the eThekwini municipali­ty and members of the SA Police Service (Sapa) between 2009 and 2014.

Some regional political leaders and local councillor­s had been implicated in stoking the violence against Abahlali BaseMjondo­lo, which was confirmed by veteran violence researcher, Mary de Haas, from the Violence Monitor.

De Haas has been involved in violence monitoring in the province for decades. She also said eThekwini police and the municipali­ty’s anti-land invasion unit were not meant to be involved in public order policing. “That is the job of trained public order police from the Saps,” she said.

“This repression has included armed attacks on our leaders’ homes, resulting in their destructio­n, sometimes while the police looked on, as well as arrests and detention on trumped-up charges, torture, assault, death threats and murders,” Mohapi said.

At least 16 activists aligned to Abahlali BaseMjondo­lo had been killed since 2013, with seven shot dead between November last year and now.

Among them were Sifiso Ngcobo, who was shot dead in Marianhill, after receiving death threats in May. Nkululeko Gwala met his demise in June 2013 after collecting informatio­n about graft in housing allocation­s that he planned to expose. He died after being threatened by known ANC members. His killing was not investigat­ed although it was reported to the police. Thuli Ndlovu was gunned down by hitmen hired by two ward councillor­s in 2014. The men, Velile Lutyeku and Christian Ngcobo, are serving life jail terms for the murder of the female activist. Samuel Hloele was shot by the anti-land invasion unit in September 2017 at Ekukhanyen­i. A police officer who shot and killed Nqobile Nzuza is serving 10 years in jail.

Abahlali has now written to President Cyril Ramaphosa and Minister of Police Bheki Cele asking for their interventi­on.

Mohapi said: “We have not received any response from the office of the president or that of the minister. There is a lot of talk about ANC leaders who are murdered by other ANC leaders, but when it comes to the murder of our members there is silence.”

eThekwini executive mayor Zandile Gumede was implicated by the organisati­on after she allegedly labelled it a “third force” Abahlali.

Mohapi believes Nyanisa and Gumede’s statements can be only be interprete­d in one way. “Nyanisa’s statement that the ANC will ‘deal with’ Abahlali gives the ward councillor­s permission to openly threaten and attack our movement. It was an instructio­n to repress us, an instructio­n that will cost lives,” he said.

Asked for comment, mayoral spokespers­on Mthunzi Gumede said Abahlali should report the issue to law-enforcemen­t agencies.

“We are committed to work and engage with them directly rather than through the media or public statements. There is not much that we differ on with Abahlali baseMjondo­lo, we just need a platform to engage on.”

However, De Haas said the eThekwini municipali­ty had been avoiding directly engaging with Abahlali baseMjondo­lo for years, which she cited as strange. “Abahlali is a well organised civil society organisati­on with structures,” she added.

Gumede did not respond to other allegation­s made by Abahlali after their full statement was sent to him. Further attempts to get comment from the ANC provincial secretary were fruitless.

Mohapi said the organisati­on did not want to align with any political party and was not fighting

We want to deepen or radicalise democracy

17:

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