Abahlali baseMjondolo
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Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) is a shack dwellers' movement that began in Durban, South Africain early 2005[1] and now also has members across KwaZulu-Natal[2] and in Cape Town.[3] The movement grew out of a road blockade[4] organized from the Kennedy Road shack settlement in the city of Durban in early 2005[5] and now operates across the provinces of KwaZulu-Natal and the Northern Cape as well as in Cape Town. It is the largest shack dweller's organization in South Africa. [6]. According to the The Times of London the movement "has shaken the political landscape of South Africa."[7].
The words Abahlali baseMjondolo are isiZulu for people who stay in shacks.
Since 2005 the movement has carried out a series of large scale marches.[8]. The movement's elected leader, S'bu Zikode, has called for "a living communism."[9], the movement has often made anti-capitalist statements[10] and it has demanded the expropriation of private land for public housing.[11].
Abahlali states that it refuses to participate in party politics[12] or any NGO style professionalization or individualization of struggle and instead seeks to build democratic people's power where people live and work.[13]
Academic work on the movement stresses that it is, indeed, non-professionalized (i.e. independent of NGO control), autonomous from party politics[14] and democratic.[15]
The movement has been involved in considerable conflict with the eThekwini Municipality[16] and has undertaken numerous protests and legal actions against the City authorities.[17] The movement is currently suing the Provincial Government of KwaZulu-Natal to have the Slums Act[18] declared unconstitutional.[19].
The movement took a strong stand against the xenophobic attacks that swept the country[20] in May 2008 and there were no attacks in any Abahlali settlements[21]. The movement was also able to stop an in progress attack in the (non-Abahlali affiliated) Kenville settlement and to offer shelter to some people displaced in the attacks.[22].
Abahlali has often made claims over severe police harassment, including torture.[23]. On a number of occasions these claims have been supported by church leaders [24] and human rights organisations [25].
In late December 2008 S'bu Zikode announced that after long negotiations the movement was about to sign a deal with eThekwini Municipality to provide services to 14 settlements and to build houses at 3 settlements.[26].
Context
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In early 2008 the United Nations expressed serious concern about the treatment of shack dwellers in Durban. [27]
The eThekwini Municipality which governs Durban and Pinetown has embarked on a slum clearance programme which means the steady demolition of shack settlements and a refusal to provide basic services (e.g. electricity, sanitation etc) to existing settlements on the grounds that all shack settlements are now 'temporary'. In these demolitions some shack dwellers are simply left homeless and others are subject to unlawful forced evictions to the rural periphery of the city.[28]. Abahlali is primarily committed to opposing these demolitions and forced removals and to fighting for good land and quality housing in the cities. In most instances this takes the form of a demand for shack settlements to be upgraded where they are or for new houses to be built close to where the existing settlements are. However the movement has also argued that basic services such as water, electricity and toilets should be immediately provided to shack settlements while land and housing in the city are negotiated. The movement has had a considerable degree of success in stopping evictions and forced removals, has had some success in winning the right for new shacks to be built as settlements expand and in winning access to basic services but has not yet been able to win secure access to good urban land for quality housing.[29].
The movement has, along with the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign refused to work with the NGO run 'Social Movements Indaba' (SMI) and some of the NGOs involved with the SMI and they vigorously reject its claims to represent movements of the poor in South Africa.[30]
Campaigns
- Housing
The primary demand of the movement has been for decent, public housing housing. The movement has often used the phrase 'the right to the city' to insist that the location of housing is critically important and demands that shack settlements are upgraded where they are and that people are not relocated to out of town developments.[31].[32]
- Services
The movement has also campaigned for the provision of basic services to shack settlements.[33].
- Evictions & Forced Removals
The movement opposes all evictions and forced removals and had campaigned vigorously on this score via public protest and, also, legal action. [34].
- Fire & Electricity
In South Africa there are an average of "ten shack fires a day with someone dying in a shack fire every other day"[35]. Abahlali has campaigned on this issue demanding, amongst other things, the electrification of shacks.[36].
- Refusal of Electoral Politics
Since 2005 Abahlali baseMjondolo has refused to vote in all state elections. This position is shared by all the organisations in the Poor People's Alliance.[37]
- The Slums Act
Abahlali baseMjondolo is currently taking the Provincial Government of KwaZulu-Natal to court to have the Slums Act declared unconstitutional.[38].[39]
- Xenophobia
As noted above the movement has campaigned vigorously against xenophobia.
Philosophy
The movement describes it self as‘a homemade politics that everyone can understand and find a home in’[40] Its philosophy has been sketched out in a number of articles and interviews. The key ideas are those of a politics of the poor, a living politics and a people's politics. A politics of the poor is understood to mean a politics that is conducted by the poor and for the poor in a manner that enables the poor to be active participants in the struggles conducted in their name. Practically it means that such a politics must be conducted where poor people live or in places that they can easily access, at the times when they are free, in the languages that they speak. It does not mean that middle class people and organisations are excluded but that they are expected to come to these spaces and to undertake their politics here and in a dialogical and respectful manner. There are two key aspects to the idea of a living politics. The first is that it is understood as a politics that begins not from external theory but from the experience of the people that shape it. It is argued that political education usually operates to create new elites who mediate relationships of patronage upwards and who impose ideas on others and to exclude ordinary people from thinking politically. This politics is not anti-theory - it just asserts the need to begin from lived experience and to move on from there rather than to begin from theory (usually imported from the Global North) and to impose theory on the lived experience of suffering and resistance in the shacks. The second key aspect of a living politics is that political thinking is always undertaken democratically and in common. People's politics is opposed to party politics or politicians' politics (as well as to top down undemocratic forms of NGO politics) and it is argued that the former is a popular democratic project undertaken without financial reward and with an explicit refusal of representative roles and personal power while the latter is a top down, professionalised representative project driven by personal power. [41],[42]
Harassment
In the early days of the movement individuals in the ruling party often accused Abahlali of being criminals manipulated by a malevolent white man, a 'third force', or a foreign intelligence agency.[43]
The movement, like others in South Africa[44], has suffered sustained illegal harassment from the state[45][46][47] that has resulted in more than 200 arrests of Abahlali members over the last 3 years and repeated police violence in people's homes, in the streets and in detention. On a number of occasions the police used live ammunition, armoured vehicles and helicopters in their attacks on unarmed shack dwellers. In 2006 the local city manager, Mike Sutcliffe, unlawfully implemented a complete ban on Abahlali's right to march[48] which was eventually overturned in court.[49][50] Abahlali have been violently prevented from accepting invitations to appear on television and radio debates by the local police. The Freedom of Expression Institute has issued a number of statements in strong support of Abahlali's right to speak out and to organise protests.[51][52].. The Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions [53] and a group of prominent church leaders[54][55] have also issued public statements against police violence and in support of the right of the movement to publicly express dissent.[56].
In March 2008 the Mercury newspaper reported that both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International were investigating Human Rights abuses against shack dwellers by the City Government of which Mlaba is the head.[57]
Church Support
The movement has received strong support from some key church leaders. In a speech at the AbM Unfreedom Day event on 27 April 2008 Anglican Bishop Rubin Philip said that:
"the courage, dignity and gentle determination of Abahlali baseMjodolo has been a light that has shone ever more brightly over the last three years. You have faced fires, sickness, evictions, arrest, beatings, slander, and still you stand bravely for what is true. Your principle that everyone matters, that every life is precious, is very simple but it is also utterly profound.Many of us who hold dear the most noble traditions of our country take hope from your courage and your dignity."[58].
The Poor People's Alliance
In September 2008 the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign, together with Abahlali baseMjondolo, the Landless People's Movement and the Rural Network (Abahlali baseplasini) formed The Poor People's Alliance. The poor people's alliance refuses electoral politics under the banner 'No Land! No House! No Vote!'.[59]
For further study
The situation in South Africa is not unique. There are many examples of similar settlements, be they called favelas, Bidonvilles, Gecekondu, Kartonsko naselje, flophouses, shanty towns, ghettos or colonias. Examples include New Village in Malaysia, Cité Soleil in Haiti, and Kibera in Kenya. For more information on shack settlements around the world, see the work of researchers Robert Neuwirth and Mike Davis as well as the special issues of Mute Magazine and the Journal of Asian and African Studies on shanty town struggles.
Membership based and directed shack dwellers' movements elsewhere include:
- The Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto (MTST) in Brazil.
- The Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign (WCAEC) in Cape Town.
Membership based and directed shack dwellers' movements in South Africa of historical interest:
- The Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union (ICU)
External links
- Abahlali baseMjondolo Website
- Khayelitsha Struggles
- Abahlali baseMjondolo newswire
- A collection of articles by Abahlali baseMjondolo members
- A Digital Archive of Abahlali baseMjondolo History from March 2005 to November 2006 (with links to pictures, articles, press releases etc) at the MetaMute site
- Magazine article giving a broad overview of the first 18 months of Abahlali baseMjondolo
- Articles by and on Abahlali baseMjondolo in Zulu
- Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign
Notes and references
- ^ [1] Academic article by Richard Pithouse on the origins of the movement
- ^ See the many statements from AbM branches in places like Pinetown, Pietermaritzburg etc on the AbM site
- ^ [2] A sample press statement from the Cape Town branch
- ^ [3]Article in the Sunday Tribune newspaper by Fred Kockott describing the road blockade
- ^ [4] Academic Article by Jacob Byrant on the origins of the movement published in the Journal of Asian & African Studies
- ^ [5]'South Africa's Poor Have Had Enough' Carol Landry, Agence France-Presse, December 2005
- ^ [6]'Stench of shanties puts ANC on wrong side of new divide' by Jonathan Clayton 25 February 2006
- ^ [7] Resistance from the other South Africa by Neha Nimmagudda in Pambazuka News(2008-07-17)
- ^ [8] Text of Speech at Diakonia Economic Justice Forum - Please follow the link to the PDF for the full content of the speech.
- ^ [9] 'Abahlali baseMjondolo – The South African Shack Dwellers Movement' by Suzy Subways, 2008
- ^ [10] See ‘The poor need proper homes’ - article in the Sowetan by Mary Papayya 1 September 2008
- ^ [11] Article by M'du Hlongwa examining the refusal of electoral politics in Abahlali
- ^ [12] Article by Xin Wei Ngiam that includes interviews on conceptions of democracy amongst Abahlali militants
- ^ [13], Article by Raj Patel examining the refusal of electoral politics in Abahlali
- ^ For instance see 'A Short Course in Politics at the University of Abahlali baseMjondolo' an article by Dr. Raj Patel of Berkley University at http://jas.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/43/1/95 and 'Upright and free: Fanon in South Africa, from Biko to the shackdwellers' movement (Abahlali baseMjondolo' by Professor Nigel Gibson from Harvard in the academic journal 'Social Identities (Volume 14, Issue 6 November 2008 , pages 683 - 715)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a905730486~db=all~order=page
- ^ [14] See, for example, 'I was punched, beaten' by Niren Tolsi, Mail & Guardian, 16 September 2007
- ^ These are detailed in some of the academic work and there is reference to some of the legal actions in the report on Centre on Housing Rights & Evictions (Geneva) which is online at http://www.cohre.org/southafrica. The papers from many of the court actions are also archived on the Abahlali site
- ^ [15]See the text of the Slums Bill plus various documents in response to it
- ^ See the documents online at http://web.wits.ac.za/Academic/Centres/CALS/HousingAndEvictions/HousingAbahlali.htm
- ^ See http://www.abahlali.org/node/3582
- ^ [16] 'The politics of fear and the fear of politics' by Michael Neocosmos, Pambazuka, 2008
- ^ See the 'The Politics of Fear and the Fear of Politics: Reflections on Xenophobic Violence in South Africa', an article by Professor Michael Neocosmos from Monash University in Australia in the Journal of Asian & African Studies Vol. 43, No. 6, 586-594 (2008) and, also, 'The May 2008 Pogroms: xenophobia, evictions, liberalism, and democratic grassroots militancy in South Africa' by Richard Pithouse, in Sanhati, June 2008 http://sanhati.com/articles/843/
- ^ [17] AbM statement on police harassment
- ^ [18] A statement against police violence against Abahlali by 11 church leaders
- ^ For instance see the relevant letter at http://www.cohre.org/southafrica as well as the substantial report
- ^ [19] As yet there appears to have been been no official announcement in this regard
- ^ United Nations Statement on Housing Rights Violations in South Africa
- ^ All of these claims can be verified with reference to the report on housing in Durban (titled 'Business As Usual') by the Centre on Housing Rights & Evictions (Geneva) which is online at http://www.cohre.org/southafrica. Also see the report to the United Nations in early 2008 that claims that the City evicts shack dwellers without court orders.[http://lib.ohchr.org/HRBodies/UPR/Documents/Session1/ZA/COHRE_ZAF_UPR_S1_2008_CentreonHousingRightsandEvictions_uprsubmission.pdf
- ^ See the COHRE report again.
- ^ [20] AEC statement on the SMI
- ^ [21]This emerges clearly in the archive of the movement's memoranda and press statements
- ^ There is reference to some of the legal actions against evictions in the 2008 report on housing rights in Durban Centre on Housing Rights & Evictions (Geneva) which is online at http://www.cohre.org/southafrica. The papers from many of the court actions are also archived on the Abahlali site
- ^ [22]This also emerges very clearly in the archive of the movement's memoranda and press statements
- ^ [23]This also emerges very clearly in the archive of the movement's memoranda and press statements
- ^ [http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/50572 Matt Birkinshaw 'The Big Devil in the Jondolos: The Politics of Shack Fires in Pambazuka News (2008)
- ^ See http://abahlali.org/search/node/fire
- ^ [24]Speech by S'bu Zikode, December 2008. Also see Dr. Raj Patel's academic article 'Electing Land Questions: A Methodological Discussion with Reference to Abahlali baseMjondolo, the Durban Shack dwellers' Movement', Codesria, 2007 [25]
- ^ The complete text of the Act, and the legal papers from Abahlali and the state are all archived at http://abahlali.org/node/1629
- ^ [26] Shack dwellers take on Slums Act by Niren Tolsi, Mail & Guardian, 14 Feburary 2008
- ^ [27]'Thinking Resistance in the Shantytown', Mute Magazine, August 2006].
- ^ The movement's philosophy is clearly articulated in a number of statements on its website - see, especially, the statements at http://abahlali.org/node/3208 It is also usefully summarised in the academic work by Nigel Gibson
- ^ Also see 'Taking poverty seriously: What the poor are saying and why it matters' by Xin Wei Ngiam in Critical Dialogue, 2006
- ^ [28] Article by S'bu Zikode written in response to Third Force allegations
- ^ See a report in illegal police repression in South Africa by the Freedom of Expression Institute
- ^ [29] An eyewitness account of police violence in the Mail & Guardian newspaper
- ^ [30] Article on police violence by System Cele
- ^ [31] Article on police violence by Philani Zungu
- ^ This is discussed in the Journal of Asian & African Studies Feb 2008; vol. 43: pp. 63 - 94.http://jas.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/43/1/63
- ^ [32] Article in the Daily News
- ^ Statement by the Freedom of Expression Institute
- ^ [33] Freedom of Expression Institute statement
- ^ [34]Also see 'Free expression means nothing if it’s limited to the media' by Na'eem Jenah, Thought Leader, 18 October 2007
- ^ [35]Open Letter to Obed Mlaba & Mike Sutcliffe by COHRE
- ^ [36]Testimony by Church Leaders
- ^ [37][38]Sunday Tribune article on church leader's statement
- ^ [39]'Why we must keep our eyes on the ground' by Stephen Friedman, Business Day, 17 October 2007
- ^ Mercury article by Imraan Buccus, 8 March 2008
- ^ The speech was printed in the May issue of 'Anglican News' and it can be downloaded at http://www.anglican.co.za/archives.htm
- ^ The alliance, and its position on electoral politics, is mentioned in the speech by S'bu Zikode at http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/12/415682.html
- Wikipedia neutral point of view disputes from December 2008
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