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Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010
Then and Now: Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010 Julian A Jacobs (8805469) University of the Western Cape Supervisor: Prof Uma Dhupelia-Mesthrie Masters Research Essay in partial fulfillment of Masters of Arts Degree in History November 2010 DECLARATION I declare that „Then and Now: Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010‟ is my own work and that all the sources I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by means of complete references. …………………………………… Julian Anthony Jacobs i ABSTRACT This is a study of activists from Manenberg, a township on the Cape Flats, Cape Town, South Africa and how they went about bringing change. It seeks to answer the question, how has activism changed in post-apartheid Manenberg as compared to the 1980s? The study analysed the politics of resistance in Manenberg placing it within the over arching mass defiance campaign in Greater Cape Town at the time and comparing the strategies used to mobilize residents in Manenberg in the 1980s to strategies used in the period of the 2000s. The thesis also focused on several key figures in Manenberg with a view to understanding what local conditions inspired them to activism. The use of biographies brought about a synoptic view into activists lives, their living conditions, their experiences of the apartheid regime, their brutal experience of apartheid and their resistance and strength against a system that was prepared to keep people on the outside. This study found that local living conditions motivated activism and became grounds for mobilising residents to make Manenberg a site of resistance. It was easy to mobilise residents on issues around rent increases, lack of resources, infrastructure and proper housing. -
An Improved Service Methodology
2006/7 A N I M P R O V E D S E R V I C E M E T H O D O L O G Y A N ote F rom the D epartment The Department of Community Safety, Western Cape is responsible for the coordination and implementation of community based social crime prevention and oversight over the South African Police Services (SAPS), amongst other key performances. Key to the Department’s approach is a transformatory and participatory methodology supported by the National Crime Prevention Strategy (NCPS, 1996) and the ikapa Growth and Development White Paper (2007). This integrated service delivery programme is implemented via Bambanani “Unite” Against Crime (Bambanani Strategy). The Bambanani Strategy is over-arching to the entire Department and is premised on the principles outlined in Batho Pele and the notion of a developmental state. Minister Leonard Ramatlakane Under the direct guidance of Minister Leonard Ramatlakane and I, the Directorates: Community Liaison Minister of Community Safety and Social Crime Prevention are responsible for the design and implementation of the Bambanani Western Cape “Unite” Against Crime Strategy. The Directorate: Strategic Services and Communication and the Directorate: Safety Information and Research is responsible for researching, documenting and sharing strategies, methodologies and information respectively with internal and external stakeholders. The Best Practice document in the form of An Improved Service Delivery Methodology 2007/08 aims to share the experiences and expose other Departments to the implementation strategies employed by the Department of Community Safety, in its efforts to transform delivery through encouraging community participation, community empowerment, social cohesion, social capital and deliver services that reflect public value. -
Custodians of the Cape Peninsula: a Historical and Contemporary Ethnography of Urban Conservation in Cape Town
Custodians of the Cape Peninsula: A historical and contemporary ethnography of urban conservation in Cape Town by Janie Swanepoel Thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Social Anthropology in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at Stellenbosch University Supervisor: Prof Steven L. Robins December 2013 Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za Declaration By submitting this thesis electronically, I declare that the entirety of the work contained therein is my own, original work, that I am the sole author thereof (save to the extent explicitly otherwise stated), that reproduction and publication thereof by Stellenbosch University will not infringe any third party rights and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part submitted it for obtaining any qualification. December 2013 Copyright © 2013 Stellenbosch University All rights reserved II Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za ABSTRACT The official custodian of the Cape Peninsula mountain chain, located at the centre of Cape Town, is the Table Mountain National Park (TMNP). This park is South Africa’s only urban open-access park and has been declared a World Heritage Site. This thesis is an anthropological and historical examination of the past and present conservation of the Cape Peninsula . I provide an overview of the relationship between the urban environment and the Cape Peninsula aiming to illustrate the produced character of the mountains and its mediation in power relations. This study of custodianship reveals that protecting and conserving the Cape Peninsula is shaped by the politics of the urban and natural environment as well as by the experience of living in the city. -
(Western Cape High Court, Cape Town) Case No
REPORTABLE IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (WESTERN CAPE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN) CASE NO: 10416/04 In the matter between: DUDLEY LEE Plaintiff and THE MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES Defendant JUDGMENT DE SWARDT, A J: [1.] Pollsmoor Prison (‘Pollsmoor’), as it is commonly known, is in fact a prison complex consisting of five different prisons : the admissions centre which is also known as the maximum security prison, the women’s prison, the juvenile prison and the medium security prisons B and C for sentenced prisoners. [2.] The plaintiff was detained in the maximum security prison for a period of approximately 4½ years from November 1999 to 27 September 2004 while he was on trial in the Regional Court (he was temporarily out on bail from January to April 2000). In June 2003, whilst he was incarcerated, he became ill and was diagnosed as suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis Page -2- (‘TB’). After the plaintiff’s release from prison, pursuant to his acquittal on the criminal charges which had been preferred against him, the plaintiff instituted an action for damages against the defendant on the basis that the defendant’s servants at the prison had by their conduct, whether acting dolus eventualis or negligently, caused him to become infected with TB. By agreement between the parties and in terms of Uniform Rule 33(4) the Court granted an Order that the merits of the plaintiff’s claim were to be adjudicated upon separately, prior to the quantum of the plaintiff’s alleged damages being dealt with. [3.] The plaintiff was represented in the action by Mr I J Trengove, acting on instructions of Mr J C Cohen of attorneys Jonathan Cohen & Associates. -
Thematic Report on Criminal Justice and Human Rights In
THEMATIC REPORT ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN SOUTH AFRICA A Submission to the UN Human Rights Committee in response to the Initial Report by South Africa under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights at the 116th session of the Human Rights Committee (Geneva March 2016) By the following organisations : Civil Society Prison Reform Initiative Just Detention International Lawyers for Human Rights NICRO 1 Contents Executive summary ................................................................................................................................. 3 Contact details of contributing organisations .......................................................................................... 5 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 7 Methodology and limitations .................................................................................................................. 8 Arbitrary arrest and detention ................................................................................................................. 8 Arrest without a warrant ..................................................................................................................... 8 Pre-trial detention .............................................................................................................................. 10 Delays in bail applications ................................................................................................................... -
From Gqogqora to Liberation: the Struggle Was My Life
FROM GQOGQORA TO LIBERATION: THE STRUGGLE WAS MY LIFE The Life Journey of Zollie Malindi Edited by Theodore Combrinck & Philip Hirschsohn University of the Western Cape in association with Diana Ferrus Publishers IN THE SAME SERIES Married to the Struggle: ‘Nanna’ Liz Abrahams Tells her Life Story, edited by Yusuf Patel and Philip Hirschsohn. Published by the University of the Western Cape. Zollie Malindi defies his banning order in 1989 (Fruits of Defiance, B. Tilley & O. Schmitz 1990) First published in 2006 by University of the Western Cape Modderdam Road Bellville 7535 South Africa © 2006 Zolile (Zollie) Malindi All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner. Front and back cover illustrations by Theodore Combrinck. ISBN 0-620-36478-5 Editors: Theodore Combrinck and Philip Hirschsohn This book is available from the South African history online website: www.sahistory.org.za Printed and bound by Printwize, Bellville CONTENTS Acknowledgements Preface – Philip Hirschsohn and Theodore Combrinck Foreword – Trevor Manuel ZOLLIE MALINDI’S LIFE STORY 1 From a Village near Tsomo 2 My Struggle with Employment 3 Politics in Cape Town 4 Involvement in Unions 5 Underground Politics 6 Banned, Tortured, Jailed 7 Employment at Woolworths 8 Political Revival in the 1980s 9 Retirement and Reflections Bibliography ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Special thanks to Graham Goddard, of the Robben Island Museum’s Mayibuye Archive located at the University of the Western Cape, for locating photographic and video material. -
Academic Fictions: Cape Town Through Time and Space: an Experimental Poem Written by Carolina Earle February 23, 2021
#Academic Fictions: Cape Town through Time and Space: An Experimental Poem written by Carolina Earle February 23, 2021 Part 1: 1921 “Poison Tea, Colonial Imports”, by an Observer 1 of 23 “Them nasty Malays can make it work months after you take it”, quotes Lady Duff G.: This, Cape’s white servants had said of the punks. So, Mr ‘Malay doctor’ downs his tea Then walks away: indignity. To his spiced plates of Europe-Asia-Africa: And, “exotic!” they’ll say, one day, of this… Forget spice was brought by the trafficker. The Cape’s shining sea collects the city’s tears. bredie, breyani, bobtie, sosaties. broken, breaking, tied up, massacred slaves. 2 of 23 The Cape’s shining sea collects the city’s tears. Mr ‘Malay doctor’ salts his soup, grave. In his home built on the bones of black and brown flesh. Calm, Lady G. walks in the sand. 3 of 23 4 of 23 The Sea as Memory for Slavery. Photo by Erik Mclean (Unsplash). Part 2: 1930s “Expulsion to the City”, by a White Farmer Sweet Earth — pure — how tender did you spring forth grains for my chakalaka and pap, herb for my aching knees, tobacco for my hot pipe. My Earth. My hearth. Thankful for my birth here in the hills of my bountiful Cape. Here, I was God: Yellow sugar and yellow grains turned gold Once they’d run the rounds of the ocean deep. 5 of 23 But alas — as you sense it — I must mourn you. Earth!, I now come to announce to you my death. -
Urban Violence in Colonial Africa: a Case for South African Exceptionalism
Journal of Southern African Studies, Volume 34, Number 3, September 2008 Urban Violence in Colonial Africa: A Case for South African Exceptionalism Gary Kynoch (Dalhousie University) In an attempt to move beyond the parochial character of the otherwise rich historiography of urban South Africa, this article compares the level of violent crime, gang conflict and vigilantism in the segregated townships and mining compounds surrounding South African cities, particularly Johannesburg, in the period to 1960, with that of African neighbourhoods in colonial cities elsewhere on the continent. The evidence suggests that concepts of South African exceptionalism need to take account of the extraordinary degree of urban violence that distinguished South Africa from its colonial contemporaries. A brutalising mining environment, combined with racial ordinances that criminalised Africans and coloureds and exposed vast numbers of men to prison and prison gangs, produced a culture of urban violence unique in colonial Africa. Wives and young girls were raped in the streets and on their way home from work. Some were even raped in their own homes in front of their families who were too terrified to report to the police for fear of victimisation. The gangsters ruled the townships at the point of knife or pistol. They robbed the people in the trains to and from work, in the bus queues, and in their homes. They assaulted innocent victims in the street and terrorised one area after another. (Non-European Affairs Committee Report to the Johannesburg City Council, 1954)1 Colonial ‘pacification’ campaigns in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century Africa clearly demonstrated European military superiority, and for several decades thereafter colonial states maintained an effective monopoly on armed force. -
Organised Crime on the Cape Flats 35
Andre Standing i Organised crime A study from the Cape Flats BY ANDRE STANDING This publication was made possible through the generous funding of the Open Sociey Foundation i ii Contents www.issafrica.org @ 2006, Institute for Security Studies All rights reserved Copyright in the volume as a whole is vested in the Institute for Security Studies, and no part may be reproduced in whole or part without the express permission, in writing, of both the author and the publishers. The opinions expressed in this book do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute, its Trustees, members of the ISS Council, or donors. Authors contribute to ISS publications in their personal capacity. ISBN: 1-920114-09-2 First published by the Institute for Security Studies PO Box 1787, Brooklyn Square 0075 Pretoria, South Africa Cover photo: Benny Gool/Oryx Media Productions/africanpictures.net Cover: Page Arts cc Printers: Tandym Print Andre Standing iii Acknowledgements This book was commissioned by the Institute for Security Studies through a grant provided by the Open Society Foundation. I have been fortunate to work from the Cape Town office of the ISS for the past few years. The director of the ISS in Cape Town, Peter Gastrow, has been exceptionally supportive and, dare I say it, patient in waiting for the final publication. Friends and colleagues at the ISS who have helped provide a warm and stimulating work environment include Nobuntu Mtwa, Pilisa Gaushe, Charles Goredema, Annette Hubschle, Trucia Reddy, Andile Sokomani, Mpho Mashaba, Nozuko Maphazi and Hennie van Vuuren. In writing this book I have been extremely fortunate to have help and guidance from John Lea, who I owe much to over the years. -
From Ninevite to Comtsotsi: Township Gangs, Divided Communities and Urban Violence in Twentieth Century South Africa
4 UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED SOCIAL RESEARCH SEMINAR PAPER TO BE PRESENTED IN THE RICHARD WARD BUILDING SEVENTH FLOOR, SEMINAR ROOM 7003 AT 4PM ON THE 18 MAY 1998. TITLE: From Ninevite to Comtsotsi: Township Gangs, Divided Communities and Urban Violence in Twentieth Century South Africa BY: G. Kynoch NO: 436 FROM NINEVITE TO COMTSOTSI: TOWNSHIP GANGS, DIVIDED COMMUNITIES AND URBAN VIOLENCE IN TWENTIETH CENTURY SOUTH AFRICA Gary Kynoch Department of History Dalhousie University Visiting Research Associate Institute for Advanced Social Research University of the Witwatersrand Private Bag 3, Wits 2050 South Africa E-mail: [email protected] DRAFT 'please do not cite without the author's permission FROM NINEVITE TO COMTSOTSI: TOWNSHIP GANGS, DIVIDED COMMUNITIES AND URBAN VIOLENCE IN TWENTIETH CENTURY SOUTH AFRICA Despite the unprecedented level of public concern with violent crime in the "new South Africa", surprisingly little effort has been made to explore the historical roots of urban gangsterism. Since their establishment, the segregated black residential areas commonly referred to as townships have proved a fertile breeding ground for criminal gangs. Moving beyond the standard approaches which characterise gangs as either social bandits or destructive predators, this paper suggests that gang/community relations were fluid and ambiguous and that to understand why gangs have been (and remain) such a prevalent presence in the townships we need to appreciate the fragmented nature of township society and the ways in which gangs reflected, exploited and exacerbated urban fault lines. Finally, a comparison between criminal violence on the Rand in the 1940-1980 period and the more recent political conflict between supporters of the ANC and Jnkatha will attempt to demonstrate how divided communities are vulnerable to gang violence. -
The Continuity of African Institutions Under Colonialism." Pp
Web-Based Bibliography 1 Introduction General Works on African History: Ajayi, J. F. Ade. "The Continuity of African Institutions under Colonialism." Pp. 189-200 in T. O. Ranger, ed., Emerging Themes in African History. Nairobi: East African Literature Bureau, 1968. Nugent, Paul. Africa since Independence. Houndmills Eng: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. Appiah, Kwame Anthony. In My Father's House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992. Austin, Ralph. African Economic History: Internal Development and External Dependency. London: James Currey, 1987. Coquery-Vidrovitch, Catherine. Africa: Endurance and Change South of the Sahara. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998. Fanon, Frantz. The Wretched of the Earth. Trans. Constance Farrington. New York: Grove, 1966. Freund, Bill. The Making of Contemporary Africa: The Development of African Society Since 1800. 2nd edition. Boulder: Rienner, 1998. Jewsiewicki, Bogumil, and David Newbury, eds. African Historiographies: What History for Which Africa? (Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1986). Mazrui, Ali, ed. General History of Africa: Africa since 1935. Berkeley: University of California Press for UNESCO, 1993 M'Bokolo, Elikia. Afrique Noire: histoire et civilisations du XIXe siècle à nos jours. 2nd. ed. Paris: Hatier, 2004. Middleton, John, and Joseph Miller, eds. New Encyclopedia of Africa. 4 vols. Detroit: Thomson Gale, 2007. Rwanda: Chrétien, Jean-Paul. Le défi de l'ethnisme: Rwanda et Burundi: 1990-1996. Karthala: 1997. 1 Des Forges, Alison. “Leave None to Tell the Story”: Genocide in Rwanda. New York: Human Rights Watch, 1999. Gourevitch, Philip. We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families: Stories from Rwanda. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998. -
A Critical Analysis of Gangsterism in South African Correctional Centres: the Case of Barberton Management Area
A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF GANGSTERISM IN SOUTH AFRICAN CORRECTIONAL CENTRES: THE CASE OF BARBERTON MANAGEMENT AREA by SARAH LETTIE NEL submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of MAGISTER TECHNOLOGIAE in the subject CORRECTIONAL SERVICES MANAGEMENT at the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SUPERVISOR: DR P MUTHAPHULI FEBRUARY 2017 DECLARATION Name: SARAH LETTIE NEL Student number: 36885320 Degree: MASTER OF TECHNOLOGIAE Exact wording of the title of the dissertation as appearing on the copies submitted for examination: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF GANGSTERISM IN SOUTH AFRICAN CORRECTIONAL CENTRES: THE CASE OF BARBERTON MANAGEMENT AREA I declare that the this dissertation is my own work and that all the sources that I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by means of complete references. ________________________ _____________________ SIGNATURE DATE Dedicated to my late sister, Helena Jacobs (nee Botes) (Liekie) who was gifted, but passed away at a young age. i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS My sincere thanks and appreciation to: Our Heavenly Father for giving me the wisdom, guidance and courage to further my studies. Dr. Phumudzo Muthapuli, my mentor and supervisor, for your professional guidance and patience. Correctional Services Area Commissioner Barberton: Mr. B.K. Fakude and Staff Support Mr. S.A. Nkosi for granting me permission to conduct the research. Thank you to my colleagues, friends, participants in my research, and family members for all your support, interest and motivation. My family deserves to be mentioned by name,