Atrocities in South Africa - Spread the Word
Mute magazine declares its solidarity with Abahlali baseMjondolo and the residents of Durban's Kennedy Road shack settlement. We urge our readers to do whatever they can to spread the word about the recent attacks there. If you can, please donate to help them deal with the aftermath, and put pressure on politicans to allow Abahlali to return to the settlement. There is a link to a petition below and (coming soon!) a donate button
[The following is based on a report from Kennedy Road]
On Saturday 26 September, Abahlali baseMjondolo, the shack dwellers movement, was attacked in the Kennedy Road settlement, Durban, by an armed mob chanting ethnic slogans and backed, fully, by the ANC.
Kennedy Road, as Mute readers may know, is one of the poorest shack settlements in Durban. Local police appear to be entirely complicit in these attacks, as do local members of the African National Congress.
Many residents of the settlement were beaten and two were killed. As the community defended itself spontaneously two of the attackers were also killed - with their own weapons. The police refused to intervene and then arrested eight of the local Abahlali leaders in the settlement on murder charges. Most of those who were arrested were in fact away from Kennedy Road at a dance performance in another part of the city at the time. The others, including S'bu Zikode, one of the shack dwellers movement’s elected leaders, had their homes destroyed and had to flee the settlement. ANC politicians and the police were present while the houses were destroyed.
The settlement is now controlled by an armed pro-ANC group who have the full backing of the police and the party. Abahlali are banned from the settlement, which they were elected to lead, on the pain of death. At least a thousand people have fled and many are sleeping rough.
This will all be terribly familiar to those who know something about the struggles of popular movements in places like Brazil, Mexico or Nigeria. For South Africans this is very familiar from the 1980s when the apartheid state employed these tactics. But no one expected to see this in South Africa after apartheid. It came out of the blue.
Kennedy Road’s residents and their supporters are shocked and don't have the resources to deal with the situation – they are struggling with basic things like accommodation and food for the displaced. They are also struggling with the organised propaganda from the state. The media has been told that the settlement has been 'liberated from criminals'. The ANC are openly celebrating the 'liberation' of Kennedy Road and are threatening to arrest S'bu Zikode too. They are calling the movement 'criminals' and, at the same time, saying that the human rights entrenched in the post-apartheid order are giving criminals a free ride and that police need to be given permission to shoot to kill. The ANC’s ‘criminals’ are your ‘terrorists’ - people who are defined as being outside of the protection given to those that count.
Please have a look at the Abahlali website –http:/www.abahlali.org - and share the information there widely.
There is a particularly strong statement from Bishop Phillip - who struggled with Steven Biko and who has, in the face of this attack, decided to cross the river into open opposition to the state once more.You can sign up to a petition asking President Joseph Zuma to intervene and reminding him and those involved in the violence that the world is watching, here:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/9/an-open-letter-to...
Send money:
Bishop Phillip [Anglican Bishop of Natal (KZN) and Chairman of the Kwa Zulu-Natal Christian Council] has suggested ways to support the movement - one of the suggestions is money pure and simple for those who had to flee Kennedy Rd:
Many people have fled their homes with nothing but what they could carry. They need urgent financial assistance. I have agreed to co-ordinate a relief fund and donations can be made to: Diocese of Natal Trust Account, First National Bank
Account number: 509 3118 7386; Branch code: 257 355, Midlands Mall Branch, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa From Statement of Support by Bishop Rubin Phillip, email: bishopATdionatal.org.za
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