14 July 2020
On Tuesday, near the corner of Sax and Hindle roads in Mfuleni, dozens of shack dwellers were rebuilding their shacks after demolitions were carried out by the City of Cape Town on Sunday and Monday.
The extensive new land occupation started on Thursday. People were still arriving with overloaded trucks and bakkies and marking out fresh plots on Tuesday.
They came from Nyanga and Khayelitsha and nearby informal settlements such as Shukushukuma and Nyakathisa. Backyarders from nearby RDP houses were also dismantling their shacks and joining the occupation.
Nontobeko Ntoyabo, Exco member of the Cape Peninsula South African National Civic Organisation (SANCO), who lives nearby, said, “I’m shocked to see people from Grabouw and Dunoon locating their shacks here without anyone’s knowledge.”
She said newcomers from other townships normally bring a letter from their local SANCO leaders stating who they are.
“We are wary of welcoming new people that we don’t know,” she said.
She said, “Our children have been staying in backyard shacks for ages. They also want a space.”
Ntoyabo said she was worried that space was not being left for roads. “Emergency services will not be able to have access,” she said.
On Sunday, GroundUp interviewed some of the new land occupiers shortly before officials arrived to tear down their shacks.
Community leader Nomxolisi Lentsa said no one had instigated the occupation. She said people were looking for dry ground as their shacks were flooded.
“Residents became fed-up with the City for failing to help flood victims and staying in wet shacks,” she said.
“We don’t have a rent problem because we stay in our own shacks in informal settlements. Flooding has forced us to build our shacks here,” she said.
Thuli James said she had been living with her three children in Tokwana Street, Extension 6, renting a backyard shack for R600 a month. A storm water drain nearby had flooded, spilling dirty water and faeces into her shack, she said.
“On Friday, I carried my baby on my back while my belongings were floating on water … The water dammed up to my knees,” she said.
She used her childrens’ social grants to place a R200 deposit on a shack worth R3,900.
She said she hadn’t taken the decision to relocate lightly. “If I had money, I would not stay in a place without water and toilets while I have kids,” she said.
Councillor Malusi Booi, Mayco Member for Human Settlements, said the City owns a portion of the adjoining land, but the main section belongs to Cape Nature. There is an interdict in place covering the nature conservation land.
Booi would not disclose how many shacks were demolished as this was “operational information”.