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Tag: President Cyril Ramaphosa

  • South Africa declares gender violence a national disaster after protests

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    South Africa has declared violence against women a national disaster following an online campaign culminating in countrywide protests on Friday.

    Women were urged to “withdraw from the economy for one day”, and lie down for 15 minutes at 12:00 local time (10:00 GMT) in honour of the 15 females who are murdered in the country every day.

    The state had refused to make the classification but changed tack after “evaluating the persistent and immediate life-safety risks posed by ongoing acts of violence”.

    South Africa experiences some of the world’s highest levels of gender-based violence (GBV), with the rate at which women are killed five times higher than the global average, according to UN Women.

    The National Disaster Management Centre (NDMC) has classified GBV and femicide a disaster following “a thorough reassessment of previous reports and updated submissions from organs of state as well as civil organisations”, said Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister Velenkosini Hlabisa.

    The NDMC had earlier said calls to make the declaration did not meet legal requirements.

    Warning: This report contains descriptions of sexual assault

    Fridays “lie downs” happened in 15 locations across South Africa, including major cities such as Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg.

    Allies in Eswatini, Kenya and Namibia have also expressed their support for the protest and say they joined in.

    The demonstrators wore black as a sign of “mourning and resistance”.

    The protest, dubbed the G20 Women’s Shutdown, has been organised by Women for Change, which has also been spearheading the online campaign that has seen many people, including celebrities, change their social media profile pictures to purple – a colour often linked to GBV awareness.

    There has also been an online petition, signed by over one million people.

    On Thursday, President Cyril Ramaphosa told the G20 Social Summit that South Africa had “declared gender-based violence and femicide a national crisis” in 2019.

    Shortly afterwards, Mr Hlabisa confirmed it had been upgraded to a national disaster and that an announcement would be made on Friday, according to Women for Change.

    The organisation shared a statement on its Instagram page on Thursday welcoming the news and telling its followers “we have won” and that their “persistence has been recognised”.

    “We have written history together [and] we have finally forced the country to confront the truth,” it said.

    The declaration allows the government to strengthen its support for current GBV and femicide response structures, implement its contingency arrangements and “ensure that all necessary mechanisms are activated to enable [it] to manage the disaster effectively”.

    Before the announcement, Women for Change spokesperson Cameron Kasambala told the BBC that “so many beautiful acts and legislations” had been followed by “lack of implementation and transparency” on the government’s part.

    “We’ve integrated violence… into our culture [and] into our social norms,” she said.

    “Once the government truly reacts to this issue, I feel like we’ll already be able to see a reaction on the ground. Because they set the precedent and the tone for how the country responds.”

    Grammy-award winning singer Tyla is among the thousands of celebrities and citizens who have rallied behind the call and changed their social media profiles. Some have gone further, posting pictures of purple hearts, nail polish and even clothing in what has since been dubbed the “purple movement”.

    A South African professor who asked to remain anonymous told the BBC she had taken leave so she could travel to Johannesburg from Free State province to take part in the silent protest.

    It’s important for her because she said she had second thoughts about simple things like jogging and hopes that the protest will “slow the scourge” of GBV.

    However, some women have faced a backlash from employers for wanting to participate in the protest. One product designer who works for a major cooperation said they were strongly advised against taking part.

    Some women who feel the government is not doing enough have taken matters into their own hands.

    Lynette Oxeley founded Girls on Fire to help women protect themselves through gun ownership. It is legal to own a firearm in South Africa for self-defence if a person has a valid licence.

    Most of the women in her group have been raped, attacked, robbed, or experienced some level of violence.

    Prudence joined the group after she was raped in 2022.

    “I said: ‘No’. I screamed, I cried but he didn’t take no for an answer,” she told the BBC.

    Trying to find justice was an “uphill battle” as her case was withdrawn because her rape kit – the DNA they take after the crime – was lost.

    It isn’t a “police problem, it is a nation problem,” she said.

    Although the women are trained to shoot firearms, Ms Oxeley said using a gun was a “last resort”.

    “It’s not about actually defending yourself with a firearm. I want ladies to change what they think about themselves. Stop being silent,” she said.

    “Even if you do not win the fight, at least you are fighting back.”

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  • Survivors of South Africa’s horrifying building blaze feel abandoned two years on

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    Blackened by soot, the gutted and derelict remains of South Africa’s infamous Usindiso building in central Johannesburg are an unintentional memorial to the 76 people who died here in a devastating fire two years ago.

    At one time an office block, the 1950s building in the Marshalltown area was abandoned and then taken over by several hundred people desperately needing a home.

    One of those was Vusi Tshabalala, who shakes his head in disbelief as he recalls how he survived the blaze on that late August night.

    “The fire seemed to come out of nowhere,” the 45-year-old tells the BBC in a melancholic voice, raspy from years of smoking cigarettes.

    Mr Tshabalala was asleep on the third floor of the five-storey building, where he was sharing a place with his then-girlfriend and brother.

    Awoken by the flames, they managed to escape by covering themselves in wet blankets and running in the dark towards an exit at the rear.

    “As we were running others got injured, because when they fell down, they couldn’t get back up. People were running over them. I thank God that we came out without any injuries.”

    The tragedy shocked the nation and highlighted the deep housing inequalities in Africa’s wealthiest city – inequalities the authorities promised to address.

    On the morning after the blaze, firefighters continued to douse the building in water [AFP via Getty Images]

    Visiting just hours after the blaze, President Cyril Ramaphosa called it “a wake-up call to begin to address the situation of housing in the inner city”.

    “We need to find effective ways to deal with the issue of housing,” he said.

    But two years on, Mr Tshabalala and many others have still not found a permanent home.

    Initially he was relocated to Rosettenville, 5km (three miles) south of Marshalltown, but he says he left because he could not find work around there.

    Next he tried the industrial neighbourhood of Denver, 6km east of the Usindiso building, where other survivors have been placed – but says the frequent shootings forced him to leave.

    A row of makeshift tents and dwellings lie untidily on the roadside.

    Some people are living right next to the burnt-out Usindiso building [Kyla Herrmannsen / BBC]

    At the moment he lives in the shadow of his former home, where other former Usindiso building residents have put up shacks in an informal settlement known as Emaxhoseni.

    Made of corrugated iron and wood, the structures are tightly packed together – and a few feet away, some people have even set up makeshift tents against the wall of the Usindiso building.

    The street is filthy and residents tell us the drainage is poor. During the summer rains the area gets flooded and filled with waste.

    But for Mr Tshabalala, who is currently working on a nearby construction site, living here is worth it: “I came back because at least here we get jobs. The other places we were taken to, we can’t find work.”

    He blames the authorities for not doing enough to support the survivors of the fire: “No-one wants to know where the people from this tragedy are living.”

    "I heard gunshots. Then I was hit by a bullet. I don't know who shot me but some guys were fighting outside"", Source: Thobeka Biyela, who was shot in her temporary shelter in Denver as she slept, Source description: , Image: Thobeka Biyela

    “I heard gunshots. Then I was hit by a bullet. I don’t know who shot me but some guys were fighting outside””, Source: Thobeka Biyela, who was shot in her temporary shelter in Denver as she slept, Source description: , Image: Thobeka Biyela

    Some of survivors have remained at a camp set up for them in Denver – though this does not mean they are happy.

    “This place is not safe,” 29-year-old Thobeka Biyela tells the BBC.

    Children play in between the temporary corrugated iron shelters where women are also doing laundry when we visit. There are only a few dozen portable toilets and 12 taps for the estimated 800 people who live here.

    Ms Biyela, who works as a police volunteer, explains how she was shot earlier this year as she was asleep in her home.

    “I heard gunshots. Then I was hit by a bullet. I don’t know who shot me but some guys were fighting outside,” she says, struggling to hold back the tears.

    The bullet that came through the wall and hit her is still lodged in her hip. The doctors told her trying to remove it would cause more damage.

    She has covered the bullet holes left in the wall with masking tape: “Sometimes when I see the bullet holes, I cry. I cry because I didn’t expect this to happen to me in my life. I’ve cried a lot.”

    Ms Biyela is desperate to leave the camp but she cannot afford private rent, as her volunteering role pays her very little.

    She wants the authorities to relocate her as she was told the camp was only a temporary solution, but two years on she has no idea if and when she will leave.

    “If the government had relocated us after six months like they promised us, maybe I wouldn’t blame them. But I blame them because it’s been two years.

    “Now when it’s cold, I can’t go to work because my wound hurts. I have to buy painkillers every day. My legs hurt, I can’t stand or walk for long.”

    Because of the safety issues, she has sent her three-year-old daughter, who was with her the night of the fire, to live with her grandmother in KwaZulu-Natal province.

    “I’m very scared. They promised us that they were going to put gates at the entrance of the camp but there are no gates. Anyone can walk in here.”

    The camp residents say three people have been killed since their arrival in Denver: one stabbed, another beaten to death and the third shot.

    A row of small corrugated iron homes in the sunshine. They sit on concrete plinths which have been painted red.

    Thobeka Biyela says the metal walls are so thin that people have been stabbed through them [Kyla Herrmannsen / BBC]

    The BBC contacted the city mayor’s office to ask why the survivors of the fire had not been relocated two years on but got no answer to this question.

    Nomzamo Zondo, a lawyer and the executive director of the Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI), a human rights organisation based in Johannesburg, says it has been a struggle to get people out of so-called temporary emergency accommodation.

    She explains that according to national housing policy the state should find permanent accommodation for those who are evicted or victims of a disaster, unless they are able to house themselves.

    “Generally, that doesn’t happen. Without any affordable accommodation that people can move into and without any plan for the state to provide that, it’s unlikely people will leave their temporary housing,” she tells the BBC.

    There appears to be plenty of abandoned buildings in the centre of Johannesburg that could provide permanent homes, but developers interested in revamping them then charge a rent that is beyond the reach of many.

    “The moment that you bring in the private market, there’s no space for the poor,” the housing lawyer says.

    There is some hope of improvement ahead.

    With South Africa hosting the G8 leaders’ summit in November, Ramaphosa ordered that Johannesburg’s inner-city neighbourhoods to be cleaned up ahead of the gathering.

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks to journalists at the scene of the building fire. It is dark, but he is lit by camera lights. The president is surrounded by crowds of security guards and other politicians.

    When President Cyril Ramaphosa visited in the aftermath of the fire he described the incident as “a wake-up call” [AFP via Getty Images]

    That was in March – and one focus was supposed to be the city’s crumbling buildings.

    In one city authority document Mashalltown was identified as one of the areas that would benefit from investment to ensure “cleaner streets, safer buildings, and renewed economic confidence”.

    Johannesburg would be “a place where Africa’s resilience, innovation, and potential will be on full display for the world”.

    But little seems to have happened so far and Ms Zondo says lasting change will take time.

    “The G20 is just two months away. In that time, it’s unlikely that much will be done, but our hope is that the presidency’s commitment to improving the inner city will outlive the G20 and ensure that there is dignified housing for the poor and that we don’t have another Usindiso,” she says.

    In response to a question about why the area had not been regenerated as promised, the mayor’s office told the BBC that the project would continue after the G20 meeting.

    Meanwhile many of the former Usindiso building residents remain in limbo.

    “I don’t see this changing,” sighs Mr Tshabalala.

    “If people are still living like this,” he says, pointing to the homeless men in tents behind him, “I don’t see any change. I don’t know what is happening with our government.”

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