PRASA accused of being in contempt of court
The rail agency was ordered to restore shelter to people it evicted from Cape Town Foreshore in August.
Ally Al-Habsy is one of 38 people whose shelters in central Cape Town were demolished by the Passenger Rail Agency of South (PRASA). They have been sleeping in the open since 22 August despite a court ruling that PRASA restore their dwellings. Picture: Sandiso Phaliso/GroundUp
The Passenger Rail Agency of South (PRASA) has been accused of contempt of court for failing to adhere to a Western Cape High Court ruling of 6 September to shelter families it illegally evicted in August from Transnet-owned land along Old Marine Drive in Cape Town.
On Friday, Judge Tandazwa Ndita gave PRASA 24 hours to build “temporary habitable dwellings that afford shelter, privacy and amenities at least equivalent to those that were destroyed”.
But PRASA was nowhere to be seen on the weekend, and nothing has been done to date. GroundUp found people sleeping out in the cold without shelter.
In a statement on Monday, housing activist organisation Ndifuna Ukwazi said PRASA’s inaction was “a clear act of contempt”.
“Only after the 24 hours to comply with the order had expired did PRASA notify the High Court of its intention to appeal the ruling. However, no formal application for the appeal has been filed as yet,” the statement said.
Some of the 38 people evicted said they had been living on the land for a decade.
Ally Al-Habsy, 64, a father of three children, who had welcomed the court ruling last week, told GroundUp on Sunday: “The court made a decision and we were hoping by now they will comply … It is clear they don’t regard the law.”
“For weeks we have been living in these bad conditions. All we want is to be given back our material and we continue to live as we had.”
Fellow land occupier Brian Rodriguess said: “We deserve better than this. PRASA should comply and do the right thing.”
PRASA spokesperson Andiswa Makanda has not responded to GroundUp’s numerous attempts to get comment.
This article first appeared on GroundUp. Read the original article here.