By Sandra van Rensburg (on behalf of CORC and ISN)
After more than four months of legal proceedings, the Constitutional Court delivered a ruling in favor of the displaced Marlboro families following evictions in Marlboro South, an industrial area in Sandton, Johannesburg. This ruling rendered the action of the City of Joburg as unlawful and the court called on the parties to “engage meaningfully to reach agreement on the supply of materials for building, the type of shelters allowed to be built and the final date for completion”, according to the Lawyers for Human Rights.
The following resolutions were delivered:
- COJ must provide the 141 families with sites in Marlboro.
- COJ must provide material for the construction of temporay shelters.
- COJ has 4 months to more land if needed to accomodate the 141 families.
- COJ must start a meaningful engagement regarding the balance of families evicted later during the month of August.
- COJ must pay all legal costs.
Louise du Plessis, attorney for LHR’s Land and Housing Unit, was cited in the Lawyers for Human Rights press release,
This is a significant settlement in getting the City to provide the building materials but the onus is now on the City to deliver on its responsibilities to the community and to engage with everyone involved. We are happy that our clients will be able to get their own shelter and hope that this is the last time that a municipality will use excuses like sinkholes, dilapidated buildings and bylaws to act unlawfully and evict occupiers without following due process
The Marlboro settlement, and more specifically the Warehouse Crises Committee, is a networked structure under the Informal Settlement Network. In September, the ISN organised a provincial wide solidarity march to raise the plight of the poor struggling against evictions and lack of meaningful engagement with the cities of Joburg, Ekurhuleni, Tswane, Mogale City, and Midvaal municipality. Subsequent meetings with the office of the Gauteng premier has been around the formation of memorandums of understanding between affected informal settlement communities and city governments, with clearly defined schedules of activities attached. While these informal settlements wait for government to get its house in order, communities have been implementing small scale improvement projects through the Community Upgrading Finance Facility.
[vimeo width=”620″ height=”485″]https://vimeo.com/49744961[/vimeo]Going forward, CORC will be supporting the Marlboro in finding situational responsive solutions for the re-occupation of allocated plots as per the court ruling. A design studio was launched with the University of Johannesburg (UJ) in July 2012 before the evictions started. The aim of this process was to produce a tangible and clear set of document that could be used to engage the city, and other stakeholders, in discussing a developmental future and possible solutions for the residents of Marlboro. Many of these proposals will be taken up again as the community engages the City on appropriate resettlement terms.
Read more
- Lawyers for Human Rights press release
- ISN leads with Asihambi solidarity march
- The dark side of planning: on the demolition of Chico’s Ice Cream Factory