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South Africa: Abahlali baseMjondolo to Mourn UnFreedom Day on 27 April 2009

category southern africa | community struggles | non-anarchist press author Friday April 24, 2009 22:21author by Abahlali baseMjondolo - AbM Report this post to the editors

Walala Wasala, Wavuka Usuhlala ema-Thini

Monday 27 April will mark the 15th anniversary of the first democratic
elections in South Africa. Once again the poor will be herded into stadiums
so that the politicians can tell the people to celebrate their freedom. Once
again Abahlali baseMjondolo will be decelebrating. We will be holding our
fourth annual UnFreedom Day.
On the Sunday before unFreedom Day we will launch the beautiful new crèche
that has been built in the Motala Heights settlement.The Motala Diggers have
already been running a large community garden for sometime and the community
have now decided to take the initiative and to build and run their own crèche.

On unFreedom Day a major announcement will be made about the next step in
the movement’s ongoing struggle with the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Housing
and their notorious Slums Act.

The unFreedom Day event will begin at 9:00 a.m. and will be held in the
Kennedy Road settlement in Clare Estate, Durban. We will be joined by
comrades from all of the organisations that make up the Poor People’s
Alliance – Abahlali baseMjondolo in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape, as
well as the Rural Network from KwaZulu-Natal, the Landless People’s Movement
from Gauteng and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign.

Bishop Rubin Phillip has been invited to address the gathering. There will
also be performances from the famous Kennedy Road isicathimya choir the
Dlamini King Brothers, the maskhandi group Cupha Mbonambi from Taflekop, the
Motala Gospel Group as well as the Vibe Jammers, a dance group from Siyanda,
and new isicathimiya and hiphop groups from Joe Slovo.

unFreedom Day has been organised by the Abahlali baseMjondolo Youth League.
While others were voting on Wednesday we were planning unFreedom Day. The
day before the election some of us attended a small University of Abahlali
baseMjondolo seminar on the idea of a living communism. Our hands are clean.
Nobody can come with any facts to condemn unFreedom Day. The fact is that we
are not free. Everyone can see that. Even on Election Day, where everyone is
supposed to be equal as voters, the poor stand in the queues while the
politicians are rushed to the front. Even on Election Day there is no
equality. There is a constant oppression that promotes inequality in its
simplest forms.

We are never given a platform to say what is inside our hearts. Therefore we
have provided the platform for ourselves so that we can speak for ourselves
and speak freely. It is up to us to tell the truth about our suffering and
our struggles.

How can we be free when the system has completely excluded us? How can we be
free when:

- we do not matter, we do not count?
- we are given not a platform and when we make our own platform we are
not heard?
- we don’t have land and we don’t have houses?
- evictions continue?
- a promise of houses for all is changed to ‘housing opportunities’ for
all and a ‘housing opportunity’ means forced removal to a government shack
(i.e. a so-called ‘transit camp’)?
- we still lack adequate access to water, toilets, electricity and refuse
removal
- our children live and die with running stomachs (diarrhoea)?
- instead of jobs we get free food before elections?
- our children are still forced out of the good schools?
- women are still not safe in our cities?
- street traders are still being forced out of the cities and people born
in other countries are still being taken to Lindela?
- people continue to be oppressed by ward councillors and BECs?
- our comrades in Symphony Way face eviction?
- the Legal Aid Board joins the police in openly and blatantly working
for the rich in Motala Heights?
- we get no reply to the memorandums that we hand over at marches?
- what development does happen is always top down and is always
corrupted?
- the government only assists those that are close to them and that
uphold their authority?
- the system lies – the government’s papers say that development was
completed in New Maus in 2003 but people are still living in poverty there,
even dying from the poverty?

The politicians tried various strategies to get the people to vote in these
elections.

In Reservoir Hills the ANC councillor is Jayraj Bachu. He is strongly
supports the eviction of all shack dwellers from Reservoir Hills and he has
withheld basic services from shack dwellers and said nothing when people are
shot by private securities for connecting electricity. On the Sunday before
the election Bachu slaughtered 16 sheep and sent buses to the Pemary Ridge,
Arnett Drive and Shannon Drive settlements to fetch people to come and eat
the sheep. Those that went had no toilets to go to after they had digested
Bachu’s sheep.

In Joe Slovo the strategy to force people to vote was to cut off the water
the night before the election. People were told that it would only be
switched back on after they had voted. It was made clear that services will
only be provided in exchange for loyalty. It is not surprising that there
was a road blockade in that area.

In Motala Heights there is a long record of people denied access to pensions
and grants if they do not have a voter’s stamp in their ID book. In Foreman
Road people were told that child support grants would be stopped if people
did not vote. Again the message is clear.

Yet all these politicians that want our votes continue to treat us with
contempt. Nigel Gumede said, in a public election meeting, that the people
in Kennedy Road are eating from the dump. He must apologise. Terror Lekota
said on Ukhozi FM that people are staying in shacks because they are
uneducated and yet they are demanding to get tenders and contacts despite
being uneducated. He must also apologise.

Nigel Gumede also publicly offered a house to Nonhlanhla Mzobe in the same
meeting. Some years ago Nonhlanhla was the deputy chairperson of the Kennedy
Road Development Committee. She played a big role in the beginning of our
struggle in 2005. She has taken the house and moved out of her shack. This
is also a corruption, a political corruption, an attempt to buy off our
movement.

Over the years many people in our movement have been offered houses and jobs
by politicians wanting to buy off the movement. Almost all have said no. The
NGOs have also offered many people moneyand travel. Almost everyone has said
no. There was a reason why one of our earliest slogans was ‘Phanis
Breyani!’.

We are not fighting with Nonhlanhla. We do not judge people who decide to do
what they think that they must do for their families. Everyone has the
right to make their own choices. But once you decide to become a breyani
chower you are no longer an Umhlali. Politics is about choices, sometimes
hard choices. But we are making it clear to the politicians that we note the
deep corruption of the system and that we have always been clear that when
we struggle we struggle collectively. We will always insist that the fruits
of our struggle must be shared collectively. From time to time the
politicians or the NGOs will succeed in persuading an individual to take
their houses, or their money or their fancy trips. But from the moment that
person agrees to take the breyani their membership in the movement ends so
the movement is never for sale.

Delivery according to political loyalty must end. All forms of corruption
must end. Some of us have corrupt relatives in government. We condemn their
corruption with no reservations. State money is the people’s money. A thief
is a thief.

There have been many clear demonstrations of dissatisfaction from poor
people’s organisations in recent days. All the organisations in the Poor
People’s Alliance decided to boycott the election. The Anti-Privatisation
Forum in Johannesburg and Sikhula Sonke in Cape Town took the same position.

In Gugulethu and Alexandra people demonstrated next to polling stations. In
Durban people organised road blockades from Kennedy Road (21 April & 23
April), Lamontville (20 April) and Siyanda (14 April).

We are still warning that the anger of the poor can go in many directions.

We are issuing a clear warning to those who wish to remote the world that we
will not be silent. We will not be good boys and girls. We are men and women
who have resolved to take our place in the world. We are determined to
participate in the construction of this country.

John Minto’s refusal of the O.R. Thambo award, and his decision to reject
the 5 star hotels and red carpets offered by the politicians and to instead
visit the organisations of the poor, shows that the progressive world is
watching South Africa and taking a clear side with us.

We are not alone in our struggle to break the power of the rich, and their
money, over the use and distribution of land. We are not alone in our
struggle to build the power of the poor and to reduce the power of the rich.

Abahlali baseMjondolo has a long way to go in our struggle to overcome
inequality. On unFreeedom Day we will strengthen ourselves for the long road
ahead.

*For more information and comment please contact: *

Mazwi Nzimande: 074 222 8601

Lindo Motha: 074 460 5806

Mnikelo Ndabankulu: 079 745 0653

Zodwa Nsibande: 082 830 2707
--
*Uyishayile!*

Related Link: http://www.abahlali.org

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