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Bredell land occupation

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TheBredell land Occupation occurred on theEast Rand,Johannesburg, inSouth Africa, in 2001 near toJohannesburg International Airport. It was quickly evicted but became a major national news story since a political party was accused of encouraging the action.[1]

Occupation

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Spurred by the land invasions inZimbabwe, the derelict Elandsfontein Farm No. 412 inBredell,Kempton Park (outside Johannesburg) wassquatted by 5,000 poor black people from a nearby overcrowdedtownship calledTembisa in early 2001.[2]

The 23 hectares of land were owned partly by the state and partly by private owners, including electricity supplierEskom, state-owned transport companyTransnet and a company called Groengras Eiendomme.[3]

ThePan Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC), a small political party, encouraged the occupation by taking RS25 ($3) from each squatter, which was designed to pay for legal assistance and water, but the squatters believed they were buying their plots with the money.[4]

Eviction

[edit]

The state got a court order in July permitting them to evict the landgrab. The shacks built on occupied land were then destroyed between July and August.[3] Women tried to resist by shaming the evictors with their nakedness but the eviction went ahead.[5] It was carried out by the private security firm MacLegal.[2]

Around 200 people were arrested by the police, with 90 released and 110 held in custody.Minister of Agriculture and Land AffairsThoko Didiza said that if it could be proven that PAC took money for the occupation, they would be charged with various crimes including theft. PAC representatives denied they had organised the occupation.[6]

Aftermath

[edit]

Many squatters had nowhere to go, some were housed in churches by theSouth African Council of Churches.[3]

ThePretoria High Court confirmed its earlier verdict for eviction in November 2001. The state argued that the eviction was justified because of the lack of clean drinking water, and dangers posed by an underground petrol pipe and electric cables. The PAC stated that the government was obliged to rehouse the squatters since they had lived there more than six months.[7]

Professor Gillian Hart described it as a "profound moral crisis for the post-apartheid state".[8]

Notes and references

[edit]
  1. ^‘Land Occupations are the new way of doing Land Reform’Archived October 29, 2013, at theWayback Machine,Surplus People's Project, 2011
  2. ^abDempster, Carolyn (12 July 2001)."Eyewitness: Evicted and homeless".BBC. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  3. ^abcOlufemi, Olusola (2001)."Socio-political imperatives of land invasion and eviction: Revisiting the Bredell case, Johannesburg, South Africa"(PDF).Adequate & Affordable Housing for All. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  4. ^L. Swarns, Rachel (12 July 2001)."South Africa Confronts Landless Poor, and a Court Sends Them Packing".New York Times. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  5. ^Ray of hope after day of tears at Bredell, by Baldwin Ndaba and Gudrun Heckl,The Post, 2001[dead link]
  6. ^Tabane, Rapule; Sapa (5 July 2001)."State may arrest PAC leaders for land grab".IOL. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  7. ^Tabane, Rapule (16 November 2001)."Court upholds ousting of Bredell squatters".IOL. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  8. ^The Development Decade?: Economic and Social Change in South Africa, 1994 - 2004, ed. Vishnu Padayachee, p.25
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