Subject: Article in GroundUp on Obs homeless



 *We’re being targeted, say homeless* 8 April 2015 - Ian Broughton

   - [image: From left: Nicole MacHattie, Johannes Ougat, Kevin Adams and
   Mike Slate, who has started a committee for the homeless.Slate recently
   organised a clean up of the local park. Picture: Ian Broughton]


    *From left: Nicole MacHattie, Johannes Ougat, Kevin Adams and Mike
   Slate, who has started a committee for the homeless.Slate recently
   organised a clean up of the local park. Picture: Ian Broughton*

Featured Story Homeless people in Observatory, Woodstock and Bellville have
complained about a wave of law enforcement operations against them in the
last two months. Several people have complained to the Legal Resources
Centre in Cape Town of assault.

The City of Cape Town has denied that street people are being targeted by
city officials. The City took allegations of street people being threatened
very seriously, said Mayoral Committee member Suzette Little.

The LRC’s Anthea Billy said street people’s rights were being seriously
violated. “There seems to be a general onslaught on people on the streets
and they are using city by-laws to do it,” she said. She said she had taken
statements from five people. The LRC was working with SPEAR, an ad hoc
committee set up by street people to give them a voice.

SPEAR founder Mike Slate was one of those who found himself at the
receiving end of an operation. On 11 February, he says, he and his
girlfriend were sleeping under a bridge in Observatory when they were woken
by a group consisting of Law Enforcement and security guards from
Observatory CID (OBSCID) and Groote Schuur CID (GSCID).

Slate says he and his girlfriend had been sleeping there for two weeks and
had even been woken up several times by OBSCID guards who had not told them
to move.

But on February 11 he says they were told they were only allowed to have
one blanket. Other items were confiscated, including a duvet, blanket,
mattress, clothing, prescription spectacles and contact lenses, an antique
mirror, scientific calculator and a grinder which he had fixed for someone.

Slate says that when he protested, the security guards became aggressive
and one threatened him with violence.

While some of the guards were busy with him, says Slate, others took his
girlfriend aside and forced her to sign a document banning them from the
area.

He was also accused of “pimping out his girlfriend.”

When he went to Woodstock SAPS to lay a charge of theft he says police
refused to open a case.

Western Cape police spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Andre Traut said he should
report this to the management of the station. "Every person has the right
to a policing service, and the homeless man you are referring to is by no
means excluded. He is encouraged to report the refusal of a service to the
management of Woodstock police station so that the matter can be
investigated,” said Traut.

Slate claims that it is mostly drug users who are being targeted.

Another homeless person in Observatory, who asked that his name not be used
as he fears he will be targeted and harassed even more, says he was
accosted by members of OBSCID and members of the SAPS on 10 February at the
spot where he was sleeping next to the railway line.

His possessions, including a black bag full of clothing, were taken from
him and he was escorted away to a place near the River Club.

He says that when he insisted on his stuff being returned he was told:
"Moenie kak praat nie, ons is moeg van julle nuwe inwoners.”

“I spent the rest of the night in an upright position, chilled to the bone
and with no clean clothing.”

In Bellville, homeless people who sleep in the parking lot opposite
Shoprite say their possessions have repeatedly been confiscated.

One man says he was awakened by Voortrekker Road CID (VRCID) guards who
told him to move from where he was sleeping behind an electricity box close
to Oakdale.

He claims he was disoriented by bright lights being shone in his face and
then an unmarked bakkie appeared and the driver told him: “We don’t want
you people here.”

As he got up to move away, he realised that his bags with all his
possessions were missing. When he asked where he could collect his stuff he
was told that it was being sent “for destruction.”

Early in the morning of 27 March I saw a convoy of vehicles, one with a
trailer, go through Observatory. Several street people were ordered to move
from their sleeping place on Roman Road. A few minutes later security
guards and a policeman searched the bag of a man on the Main Road.

The man, who did not want to be named, claims he was falsely accused of
being involved in something illegal, but when he asked the police officer
and City Improvement District members what he had done wrong they could not
give him an answer.

He says he was told “not to be clever” and that the policeman, whose name
is known to GroundUp, threatened to lock him up if he was seen on the
streets again.

The man was ordered to stand to be photographed and his fingerprints were
taken on a portable fingerprint scanner. He was then told to leave the area.

The City’s Little said these operations had not been sanctioned by the City
and no particular group of people was being targeted.

“No personal belongings of homeless people are confiscated. Only structures
are removed and general mess like plastic, cardboard etc. If items are left
unattended in public places, then these items are treated as abandoned
goods and then bagged and taken to our holding facility at Ndabeni where
they can be collected by the owners.”

“The City takes very seriously allegations regarding street people being
threatened or sworn at. Anyone with information in this regard is
encouraged to report it to the City for investigation.

“Both the City’s Social Development Department and staff from the Safety
and Security Directorate are expected to treat street people with respect
at all times and to uphold their dignity,” she said.

The CEO of Groote Schuur CID, Anthony Davies, confirmed that joint
operations had been conducted with City Law Enforcement and SAPS but would
not comment further.

Chief Operations Officer of OBSCID Brian Amery said security guards
accompanied Law Enforcement and SAPS “to point out areas where there are
by-law infringements, such as sleeping in the streets and in public open
spaces”.

He said OBSCID staff and the guards had no right to act against homeless
people “and they are specifically instructed to do nothing illegal in this
regard”.

But, he said, “We also acknowledge however that many of the homeless people
in Observatory are long term addicts, with no wish to be helped.
Observatory is a dense, dynamic, urban area, with a wide range of urban
management challenges and a large homeless population.

“We will never condone human rights abuses, but we will continue to tackle
behavior that is illegal and antisocial, in our efforts to make Observatory
a safe, livable community in which a wide diversity of people can feel safe
and at home.”

The Chief Operations Officer of Voortrekker Road CID, Derek Bock, said
street people’s claims that they had been harassed, threatened, sworn at or
ordered to leave the area were only allegations.

He said only City Law Enforcement was allowed to confiscate clothing and
blankets but the CID guards removed stuff such as cardboard boxes and
crates.

The chairman of the Street People’s Forum, Greg Andrews, said the City’s
policies on the homeless were “archaic” and that street people had become
“a political football”.

“Each person you meet on the street has a unique set of challenges. And
they combine in startlingly varied and complex ways to make any
one-size-fits all solution completely off-target.

“The solution is not to get them off the street, but to help them figure
out how they are going to get themselves off the street."

*Ian Broughton is a freelance writer who is also involved with a local NGO
that provides health services to street people: SPEAR (Street People's
Platform to Enable Advocacy and Representation).*



- See more at:
http://groundup.org.za/article/we%E2%80%99re-being-targeted-say-homeless_2814#sthash.54OPnK0T.dpuf

-- 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
OPS [Obsid Public Safety] - 24/7 control room 

TEL: 021-447-1066   or   072-063-1653
----------------------------------------------------------------------

EMERGENCIES:  10111

----------------------------------------------------------------------
ONW email: o...@obs.org.za
WEB: www.obswatch.org.za
FACEBOOK: facebook.com/obswatch
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Useful Obs Numbers: obs.org.za/obsdir

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups The 
Observatory Neighbourhood watch group. To post to this group, send email to 
obsnw@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
obsnw+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at 
https://groups.google.com/d/forum/obsnw?hl=en
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The 
Observatory Neighbourhood Watch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to obsnw+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to