Land grabbers could face arrest, Ekurhuleni warns
The Ekurhuleni Metro has warned communities against the illegal invasion of municipal land, saying perpetrators will face eviction and possibly arrest.
The warning follows a recent incident of residents illegally occupying municipal land in Tembisa and Tsakane in the East Rand. Last month, six people were injured during violent clashes between land grabbers and the Red Ants in Esselen Park, Tembisa, Kempton Express reported.
Acting Ekurhuleni spokesperson Lebogang Ramashala said not only is land grabbing without proper approval illegal, but it also poses life-threatening risks because most land within Ekurhuleni is either dolomitic, lies on the flood line or over old mines, is waterlocked or is not in line with the metro’s urban development plan. “Fighting the scourge of land invasions requires joint participation of all stakeholders and members of the public are encouraged to contact the local authority when they detect people invading council-owned land,” Ramashala said.
Meanwhile, the Democratic Alliance (DA) has accused the Gauteng government of failing to provide adequate housing for the poor, leading to the recent spate of illegal land invasions.
Mervyn Cirota, MPL and DA Gauteng spokesperson for Human Settlements, said communities were now taking matters into their own hands and no longer waiting for government “to do its job”.
“To date, Gauteng human settlements MEC Jacob Mamabolo has not provided a solution to the problem and despite continuous red flags raised by residents, has failed to acknowledge or understand communities’ plight,” Cirota said.
“The MEC’s actions continue to be reactive threatening apartheid-style forced removals – only increasing tensions.”
Cirota stressed that unless government re-evaluated its strategy in dealing with housing provision and allocation, as well as the 700 000 unit backlog in Gauteng, protests are likely to continue.
– Caxton News Service
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