South Africa: Anti-privatisation activist shot dead in Johannesburg by indymedia south africa Wednesday February 12, 2003 at 03:16 AM |
indymedia@union.org.za |
Early in the morning of February 8 in Orange Farm (an informal settlement of 1.5 million people south of Johannesburg), 61 year-old Orange Farm Water Crisis Committee (OWCC) and Anti-Privatisation Forum (APF) activist Emily Nengolo, was shotdead in her home by two unknown assailants in what appears to be a politically motivated attack. Over the last year, the OWCC has been actively and effectively involved in resisting water and electricity cut-offs and evictions in their community.
ORANGE FARM, 8 FEBRUARY - For the past year, Indymedia South Africa has been reporting extensively about the increasing repression against activists fighting GEAR (Growth, Employment and Redistribution), the ANC neoliberal strategy. After being shot at by Johannesburg Mayor's security guard, 87 Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee activists were jailed for two weeks in April - the case is still pending in court. More than 200 Anti-Eviction Campaign activists across the Cape Flats have been arrested and detained since June - almost ten court cases are still pending against them. The presence of international delegates during the World Summit on Sustainable Development didn't stop the government: when the summit opened, 100 activists of the Landless Peoples' Movement were jailed for refusing to leave the site of a march, another 100 activists from the Soldiers' Forum (an Anti-Privatisation Forum affiliate) were detained for 'taking a train'. In order to market their 'home-grown' structural adjustment programme for Africa, NEPAD (New Partnership for Africa's Development), Thabo Mbeki and his government had to hide and repress the growing dissent against the same neoliberal policies that have been tested in South Africa since 1996.
Early this morning in Orange Farm (an informal settlement of 1.5 million people South of Johannesburg), in what appears to be a politically motivated attack, 61 year-old APF and Orange Farm Water Crisis Committee (OWCC) activist Emily Nengolo, was shot dead in her home by two unknown assailants. According to family members who were present in the house at the time of the murder, two adult black males forced their way into Emily Nengolo's house around 1am on Friday night shining flashlights into the darkened rooms. When they came upon Emily Nengolo they were reported to have said, "this is the one we are looking for", and proceeded to shoot her twice. The two men ignored the other four people present, ran out of the house without taking anything and then disappeared into the streets of the sprawling settlement. Comrade Emily died on the spot.
Over the last year, the OWCC has been actively and effectively involved in resisting water and electricity cut-offs and evictions in their community as well as building community organisation and struggle for meaningful socio-economic development in response to the anti-people, GEAR-inspired policies being implemented by the ANC government.
Photos of Orange Farm, by imc italy: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
In another informal settlement of Johannesburg, Protea South, the Red Ants - members of Wozani Security, the private security company specialized in mass evictions which is being hired by ANC councillors to do their dirty job - have begun travelling around to intimidate the residents and to plan their attack on them. The Protea South Landless Peoples' Movement condemns "the vengeful plans of the Red Ants to begin another forced removal in our settlement after some of our members supported our comrades resisting the forced removals underway in Eikenhof."
=== act your rage ===>
www.apf.org.za
www.antieviction.org.za
southafrica.indymedia.org
'economic apartheid' occurs toute le monde by bluenose Wednesday February 12, 2003 at 04:59 AM |
i wish to refer you to 'economic apartheid in south africa' by naomi klein in her latest book, Fences and Windows. she describes the neoliberalism that has replaced racial apartheid. ' Half a million jobs have been lost since 1993. Wages for the poorest 40% have dropped by 21%. Poor areashave seen their water costs go up by 55%, electricity by as much as 400%." on top of that, there are 8 million homeless and 5 million HIV positive in South Africa. of course it was thought that this 'structural adjustment' would attract investors and distribute the wealth. not a chance. look at mexico, thailand, argentina. in my country, the cutbacks are very harsh esp in winter, and Canada has been condemned by the UN for its reductions in social programs esp their effects on single mothers, aboriginals, and seniors. there are more homeless people per capita in toronto, canada than new york city, usa. we must stop the militarism and imperialism of the usa and its corporate friends, so that the world won't fall into greater social inequality. in brazil and other parts of latin america, there is more and more crime and violence as young men take up arms to sell drugs or steal and kill rather than join a left wing guerilla movement.