South Africa: All charges against the Kennedy 6 dropped
Abahlali baseMjondolo | 31.03.2008 16:36 | Social Struggles
The Kennedy Road shack settlement was were Abahlali baseMjondolo began and although the movement now has 14 affiliated settlements and a further 25 branches the state has always been obsessed with the Kennedy Road settlement. This is where the brunt of the repression has been borne and where, a week and one year ago, 6 key activists were arrested on trumped up murder charges (the same tactic had been used against the Landless People's Movement in Johannesburg a year before). After they were denied bail and subject to ongoing violence in the prison they went on a highly publicised two week hunger strike after which they were granted bail. Now the state has quietly conceded that it never had any evidence and dropped all charges against the 6 activists.
Yesterday all charges against the Kennedy 6 were dropped just over a year after the men were first arrested.
The basic chronology of events is as follows:
The Kennedy 6 were arrested on a clearly trumped up murder charge on 21 March 2007 after a well known criminal died in police custody. While in custody they were assaulted and an attempt was made, by Senior Superintendent Glen Nayager, to force them to chant anti-Abahlali slogans. They refused.
On 31 March, after ten days in detention, they began a hunger strike in Westville prison. While in prison they were visited by Bishop Reuben Phillip.
On 10 April 2007 Abahlali attempted to march on the Sydenham Police Station. This march was illegally banned by a diktat from City Manager Mike Sutcliffe but, after a tense stand off, 14 people presented the memorandum to Nayager.
On 13 April 2007, after 23 days in prison and 14 days on hunger strike the Kennedy 6 were released on bail of R5 000 per person and under a de facto apartheid style banning order confining them to rural areas of origin.
On 24 May 2007 the banning order was overturned in a court challenge and they could return home.
On 27 March 2008 all charges against the 6 were dropped before the scheduled trial could begin due to a complete lack of any evidence against them.
Yesterday's vindication of Abahlali's insistence that the charges against the 6 were trumped up by Glen Nayager as an attack on the movement means that, without exception, the state has not attempted to prosecute a single one of the many Abahlali baseMjondolo members who have been arrested (and very often assaulted) by the police over the years. Arrest is being systematically abused as a form of extra-judicial punishment for lawful political activities.
A full press release will be discussed, written and issued soon, this is just to get the good news out quickly. The Kennedy 6 would like to express their gratitude to their lawyer Terrance Seery, to Bishop Reuben Philip and everyone in Durban and around the country and around the world who has offered support.
Abahlali stands in full solidarity with Philani Zungu and the comrades from Tongaat who were assaulted and arrested last weekend. They are all facing charges related to connecting electricity. Of course no one is being held to account for the relentless plague of fires that are directly consequent to the refusal of the municipality to electrify shack settlements and, in some instances, the active withdrawal of existing connections. A hundred shacks burnt in New Germany last night.
In the meantime any queries can be directed to S'bu Zikode at 0835470474.
The basic chronology of events is as follows:
The Kennedy 6 were arrested on a clearly trumped up murder charge on 21 March 2007 after a well known criminal died in police custody. While in custody they were assaulted and an attempt was made, by Senior Superintendent Glen Nayager, to force them to chant anti-Abahlali slogans. They refused.
On 31 March, after ten days in detention, they began a hunger strike in Westville prison. While in prison they were visited by Bishop Reuben Phillip.
On 10 April 2007 Abahlali attempted to march on the Sydenham Police Station. This march was illegally banned by a diktat from City Manager Mike Sutcliffe but, after a tense stand off, 14 people presented the memorandum to Nayager.
On 13 April 2007, after 23 days in prison and 14 days on hunger strike the Kennedy 6 were released on bail of R5 000 per person and under a de facto apartheid style banning order confining them to rural areas of origin.
On 24 May 2007 the banning order was overturned in a court challenge and they could return home.
On 27 March 2008 all charges against the 6 were dropped before the scheduled trial could begin due to a complete lack of any evidence against them.
Yesterday's vindication of Abahlali's insistence that the charges against the 6 were trumped up by Glen Nayager as an attack on the movement means that, without exception, the state has not attempted to prosecute a single one of the many Abahlali baseMjondolo members who have been arrested (and very often assaulted) by the police over the years. Arrest is being systematically abused as a form of extra-judicial punishment for lawful political activities.
A full press release will be discussed, written and issued soon, this is just to get the good news out quickly. The Kennedy 6 would like to express their gratitude to their lawyer Terrance Seery, to Bishop Reuben Philip and everyone in Durban and around the country and around the world who has offered support.
Abahlali stands in full solidarity with Philani Zungu and the comrades from Tongaat who were assaulted and arrested last weekend. They are all facing charges related to connecting electricity. Of course no one is being held to account for the relentless plague of fires that are directly consequent to the refusal of the municipality to electrify shack settlements and, in some instances, the active withdrawal of existing connections. A hundred shacks burnt in New Germany last night.
In the meantime any queries can be directed to S'bu Zikode at 0835470474.
Abahlali baseMjondolo
Homepage:
http://www.abahlali.org