Housing activists marched to the President’s Cape Town residence in August last year to demand that the State Land Disposal Act of 1961 be used to make public land available for human settlement. Archive photo: Vincent Lali
By Matthew Hirsch
President Cyril Ramaphosa has instructed the ministers of Human Settlements and Public Works to investigate demands by housing activists for land to be redistributed to communities, says Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya.
In August 2023, GroundUp reported that activists from Ndifuna Ukwazi and other organisations marched to the President’s Cape Town residence to demand that the State Land Disposal Act of 1961 be used to make public land available for housing.
The Act grants the President the power to donate, sell, lease or exchange any piece of public land in the country. The activists had identified 32 parcels of land in Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Western Cape, which could be used for people to live on.
Frustrated by the lack of response from Ramaphosa and the Presidency office, the activists wrote an open letter last month.
In response to emailed questions by GroundUp, Magwenya said the presidency had only received the emails on 30 April 2024. “These emails appear not to have reached the appropriate office in the Presidency and did not receive the necessary attention.”
He said, “President Cyril Ramaphosa has directed the Minister of Human Settlements and Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure to establish a joint team to attend to the issues raised by Ndifuna Ukwazi.”
Apart from Ndifuna Ukwazi, organisations involved in the campaign include Indibano Yabahlali, Intlungu YaseMatyotyombeni, Reclaim the City, Housing Assembly, Surplus People’s Project, Abahlali baseMjondolo (KZN) and Inner City Federation (JHB).
Acting director of Ndifuna Ukwazi Mpho Raboeane said they are planning to make more submissions to the Presidency soon. “Securing tenure is a game changer for South Africans in general. With security, one can start investing in their home and using that as a way to gain entry into the formal economy,” she said.
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Picture: GroundUp
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