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The ugly story of picturesque Greyton: Tension over the future of a piece of land known as Madiba Park

The little Western Cape town of Greyton is known for its picturesque surroundings and the overnight hike through the mountains to McGregor. In the last couple of weeks, tensions have arisen over the future of a piece of land known as Madiba Park, GroundUp reports.

The town made the news during a protest on January 14, when a farmer was accused of brandishing a firearm at protesters. But this is a sideshow to the battle over land.

WATCH: Cops probe farmer caught on camera brandishing gun at protesters

Madiba Park, or Farm 39 as it is officially known, was occupied a few years ago. Today, there are about 100 shacks on the land, housing about 300 people. The occupiers consist of workers from the Eastern Cape and families who used to live as backyarders in the area. The mix of coloured and black residents emphasised to GroundUp that they were standing united against attempts to evict them.

The complication is that Farm 39 is Moravian Trust Land for which the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform is the custodian. It has been granted to the Genadendal Transformation Committee (GTC), an elected body of local representatives. The GTC wants the occupiers removed from the land to make way for the "legal inhabitants": about 70 coloured families who have a history of living in Greyton and nearby Genadendal, who are in the process of making claims for the land.

A plea for land and access to basic services

The residents of Madiba Park accuse the Theewaterskloof municipality of ignoring their demands for land and access to basic services.

The municipality claims it appealed to the Department of Rural Development and the GTC many times to let the residents of Madiba Park stay there temporarily and allow the municipality to provide interim basic services until alternative land is provided to the residents. The municipality says it has no conclusive responses.

However, treasurer of the GTC Paul Adendorff, said the municipality bypassed the GTC in dealing with Farm 39. He said it did not "acknowledge the existence of the GTC". He also said that if the municipality continued with the proposal to install water pipes and flushable toilets on Farm 39, the GTC would go to court because the land did not belong to the municipality.

"We want [the occupiers] off our land, onto municipal land," said Adendorff.

In 2008, the GTC secured a court order preventing the municipality from using the land.

The recent protests were set off when the chemical toilets for Madiba Park were removed on Sunday, January 13.

According to the municipality, this error was due to incorrect information supplied by local management, who believed new toilets had already been installed.

The next morning, the residents woke up to find their water had been cut off. The residents marched to the municipal office on Monday.

"They take away our toilets on Sunday, we toyi toyi to get them back on Monday," said Cathy Juries, one of the community leaders in Madiba Park.

The protesters shut down the town. There was an incident with a local farmer, but the protest was peaceful otherwise.


Greyton

Cathy Juries prepares her 7-year-old son Shaun for school at their home in Madiba Park. (Ashraf Hendricks, GroundUp)

The toilets were returned on Tuesday.

The removal of the toilets also reignited the community's dissatisfaction about land and access to basic services, prompting the municipality to hold a meeting on January 16 about a way forward for Madiba Park.

The municipality promised:

  • Four flushable toilets will be installed in the coming weeks. A septic tank will be built for other toilets in the future.
  • The residents of Madiba Park will be resettled on serviced plots with access to water, sanitation, power and refuse services within the next 18 months.
  • There will be negotiations with the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and the GTC to arrange for the Madiba Park residents to stay on Farm 39 until resettlement.

Hugo Geldenhuys, spokesperson for the municipality, called the meeting "productive" but did not want to provide detailed feedback because the "matters are sensitive".

However, many residents of Madiba Park were not satisfied at the outcome of the meeting.

Living in fear of eviction

"It is not what we want to hear because we want the land that they promised us two years ago," said Colleen Phillips, a community representative from Madiba Park who attended the meeting.

Residents of Madiba Park say they live in constant fear of eviction. They say that the GTC has threatened them with an interdict, via the department, to prevent any informal settlement on Farm 39.

Juries said the Madiba Park occupants want certainty that they will not be evicted from Farm 39 while the municipality plans and constructs the new settlement.

"You don't know what will happen when you go to sleep.

"You don't know if you will come back from work and your shack will be gone."

Greyton

Madiba Park resident Colleen Phillips addresses residents after a meeting with the municipality. (Ashraf Hendricks, GroundUp)

Mzolisi Weni has been living in Greyton for 10 years and in Madiba Park for the last two years. He said he did not have faith in the promises made by the municipality.

"I've been on the housing list since 2008. They keep promising and promising," he said.

Juries and Phillips are both sceptical of the municipality's time frame of 18 months for the resettlement. They say that every year they are promised housing and jobs, only to be ignored.

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