Durban Casspirs belong in Apartheid Museum, says Abahlali baseMjondolo

04 February 2019 - 10:52 By Bongani Mthethwa
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Abahlali baseMjondolo members march to the Durban City Hall in October 2018 to hand over a memorandum of demands. The movement has accused the ANC of mobilising hitmen, the anti-land invasion unit, municipal security guards and two police forces against it.
Abahlali baseMjondolo members march to the Durban City Hall in October 2018 to hand over a memorandum of demands. The movement has accused the ANC of mobilising hitmen, the anti-land invasion unit, municipal security guards and two police forces against it.
Image: Thuli Dlamini

Shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo has criticised the city council’s decision to buy Casspirs worth R20m to protect Durban metro police during violent protests and land grabs.

The municipality bought the armoured vehicles from arms manufacturer Denel Land Systems.  

The group, whose actions have often brought them into open conflict with police, the ANC and eThekwini municipality, described the arrival of three of the four Casspirs, as "disgraceful".

"We should only see Casspirs in the Apartheid Museum. The decision to bring them back to use them against protests and land occupations is disgraceful," said Abahlali in a statement on Monday.

The movement has accused the ANC of mobilising "all kinds of violence against us in Durban using izinkabi [hitmen], the anti-land invasion unit, municipal security guards and two police forces."

It said its members and other people engaged in protest  were regularly wounded, maimed and killed.

"If the ANC had any real progressive commitments they would see protests as a democratic question and engage them as an opportunity for discussion. They would see the land question as a question of justice, understand land occupations as land reform from below and work to put the social value of land before its commercial value."

Abahlali said instead of engaging them, the ANC wanted to respond to their systemic exclusion and impoverishment with military force, using the same tools as the apartheid state.

"They want to repress rather than to engage the struggles of the oppressed. The old Casspirs did not stop the struggle against apartheid. The new Casspirs will not stop the struggle for land and dignity," said Abahlali.

A Durban metro police officer looks at one of the four Casspirs bought by the eThekwini municipality. Abahlali says the ANC responds to their systemic exclusion and impoverishment with military force, 'using the same tools as the apartheid state'.
A Durban metro police officer looks at one of the four Casspirs bought by the eThekwini municipality. Abahlali says the ANC responds to their systemic exclusion and impoverishment with military force, 'using the same tools as the apartheid state'.
Image: Thuli Dlamini

The purchase of the four Casspirs — the first armoured vehicles to be used by metro police in the country — caused a huge outcry because they were commissioned without a formal tender, at a cost of R20m in 2017.

But the eThekwini municipality defended its decision after inquiries from TimesLIVE about why it had bypassed tender processes to acquire the vehicles.

Municipal spokesman Msawakhe Mayisela said: "The city can buy from a state entity using section 57 of our supply chain management policy, read with section 110 of the Municipal Finance Management Act.”

The city’s deputy mayor, Fawzia Peer, said the Casspirs had been a long time coming and the vehicles would help safeguard metro police during volatile situations. 

But Abahlali was not pleased.

"They were first used in the wars in Namibia and Angola, and then used against the uprising against apartheid in the townships," said Abahlali.

Abahlali is embroiled in court battles with the eThekwini municipality over land occupations, which have often turned violent.

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