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News24.com | EXCLUSIVE: How land owners will score millions from Hermanus protests
The owners of a contentious piece of land at the heart of violent housing demonstrations in the coastal town of Hermanus stand to score a massive windfall of millions of rands if the state, through the Western Cape provincial government, buys it back from them.
As the communities of Zwelihle and Mount Pleasant near Hermanus protested over a lack of adequate housing during demonstrations earlier this month, the owners of the Schulphoek property were negotiating with the Western Cape to sell the piece of land back to the state.
News24 can reveal that the provincial government could shell out much more than the rumoured R34m to the owners of the protest-stricken Schulphoek – which they bought from the Overstrand municipality less than a decade ago for an effective R5m following a controversial land deal.
The rest of the developmental improvements that were supposed to form part of the sale have still not been completed, including a link road and bulk infrastructure in the area.
READ: Hermanus Schulphoek land owner agrees to sell amid protests
A convoluted history
The Schulphoek land has a convoluted and confusing history, stretching back more than 18 years.
On December 10, 1999, the Greater Hermanus Municipality entered into a fixed-term “development facilitation agreement” with RabCav, a consortium consisting of Rabie Construction and the Cavcor Property Group. In terms of this agreement, RabCav would be responsible to facilitate and implement the development of tracts of undeveloped land designated by the municipality.
The idea entailed RabCav bearing the responsibility of financing, managing and developing these properties, which would in turn earn the municipality some much needed revenue upon their sale. In return, RabCav would be entitled to charge a fee based on a percentage of the value added to the property by these developments.
On December 5, 2000, Pierré Uys, the then provincial MEC for Local Government, incorporated the Greater Hermanus Municipality into the Overstrand Municipality. Overstrand took over all the rights and obligations that had accrued to the Greater Hermanus Municipality, including the development facilitation agreement with RabCav.
Promises we keep
During a meeting with the Zwelihle community on June 29, 2005, RabCav’s Leslie Viljoen told residents that the Schulphoek property would be developed in order to fund houses, business premises and community facilities. The proceeds generated from the development of Schulphoek would be used to fund improvements in the communities of Zwelihle and Mount Pleasant.
But the development never materialised. The Overstrand Municipality’s municipal manager, Coenie Groenewald, stated that a downturn in the economy had halted the development of Schulphoek.
“The envisaged Schulphoek development did not materialise as a result of, inter alia, the downturn in the economy. Other pieces of land were also included in the Rabcav contract. In order to fast track development, an agreement was reached between Overstrand and Rabcav to sell Schulphoek to Rabcav, subject to a clause that Rabcav releases the other portions of land as per the agreement. One of these areas is the Swartdam housing project, currently being developed by Overstrand.”
Despite the apparent economic downturn, RabCav finalised the luxurious Fernkloof Golf Estate, 5km north-east of Zwelihle, in 2004. The 27-hole golf course and luxurious gated communities raked in a hearty R260m, and sold out its erven within six hours.
Tit for tat
The sale of Schulphoek happened in 2010 when the Overstrand Municipality took steps to get the development rights for several municipal properties back from RabCav.
It struck a second deal with RabCav, allowing the property developer to purchase the Schulphoek portion, in return for relinquishing any developmental rights for the remaining properties of Grotto Beach, Voelklip and Swartdam.
This option to purchase was based on a clause in the original 1999 development facilitation agreement, which gave RabCav the first option to purchase any property it developed in terms of the agreement, including Schulphoek.
The deal was mired in controversy at the time, as the sale was not advertised to other prospective bidders. The patch of land also partly consists of indigenous milkwood forest, used by locals to conduct their cultural initiation rites.
The Zwelihle Community Development Trust (ZCDT) objected to the sale of the land and maintained that the portions of land that forms the bulk of Schulphoek were historically sold to the Greater Hermanus municipality on condition that any proceeds were used exclusively for the Zwelihle community’s benefit.
It also raised concerns that the development of Schulphoek was earmarked as a means to subsidise the development of Zwelihle and Mount Pleasant communities. In the absence of the Schulphoek development, funding for Zwelihle and Mount Pleasant would evaporate.
The ZCDT also raised an issue that, while relying on the option to purchase contained in the development facilitation agreement, both the municipality and RabCav had ignored the clauses requiring public participation and community involvement in the development.
Similar objections were raised by the Hermanus Ratepayers Association (HRA) against the sale of the land. In addition, the HRA also raised concerns that the Overstrand Municipality was in fact selling a Milkwood Conservancy as part of the transaction, and held that the sale of such a conservation area to be impermissible.
Schulphoek, line and sinker
Despite the objections, the municipality and RabCav pressed ahead. The property purchase agreement saw Rabcav obtain the 50-odd hectare Schulphoek property for an effective R5.3m, despite the purchase agreement being for a total of R23.2m.
The balance of R17.9m consisted of additional developmental improvements which Rabcav would agree to provide in the area. This included electrical connections worth about R3 million and an access and link road worth another R14 million. A further R1.4 million would be payable for fees, levies and charges, arriving at the R23.2 million total price.
But the road linking Schulphoek Road and Kus Road with Church Street near the Hermanus Beach Club has not been built. The bulk infrastructure that would also form a part of Rabcav’s payment has also not been put in place.
According to the Overstrand municipality, Rabcav had already paid the R1.4m, for rezoning charges.
Overstrand’s Groenewald confirmed that neither the link-road nor the bulk infrastructure have been built by Rabcav following the sale of the property eight years ago.
However, Groenewald maintains that the consideration of either of these developments in the purchase price of the property is irrelevant, as both the link-road and the electricity infrastructure will still have to developed in terms of the conditions of sale of the land.
This means that Rabcav would still have to build the road, now valued at R30m, even if the Western Cape Government purchased the property from it.
The link-road (pink) between Church Street and Schulphoek Road has not been built.
Rabcav asks for more
Western Cape Human Settlements MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela earlier refused to disclose the amount Rabcav wanted for the property. Asked if it was more than the rumoured R34m, Madikizela told News24 that “he [the seller] asked for more than that”. Madikizela said the government would not just pay the asking price, as the land would have to go through comparative valuation processes.
Considering that RabCav effectively only paid R5.3m for the Schulphoek land, the property developer stands to gain massively should the deal proceed.
Leslie Viljoen, speaking on behalf of RabCav, sidestepped detailed questions posed on the transaction.
“There is an 18-year history to this story which has been in the public domain on and off since 1999, both fact and fiction. It is not possible to give a balanced perspective by answering a few short questions and, due to the sensitivities around the latest political developments, we do not think it prudent to debate this further in the media.”
Ironically, his words echo those that then Overstrand mayor Theo Byleveldt told IOL in 2010. He reportedly said that the Fernkloof and Schulphoek developments had spanned 10 years, and it had been difficult to explain their “finer details” in the press. He believed that there had been “a lot of vexatiousnous behind the controversy”.
Eight years on, and the same questions are being asked by demonstrators in the streets of Hermanus.
Questions posed to Viljoen – about whether their asking price for Schulphoek included or excluded the outstanding infrastructure it was required to build – were met with a copy-and-paste of his earlier response.
Negotiations Ongoing
Madikizela’s office indicated that the purchase price had not been agreed upon. A valuation of the property still had to be conducted on the land parcel before any figures could be thrown about. They did, however, indicate that the original conditions of the sale of the property would be taken into account when negotiating a purchase price.
Tensions have flared up in recent weeks in Zwelihle as local residents took to the streets to protest the lack of adequate housing in Hermanus. The resulting protests have seen the Western Cape town shut down for several days, hobbling local businesses and the community.
Mayor Dudley Coetzee told community leaders at a meeting at Overstrand Municipal offices last week: “My priority is to get Schulphoek back. Never mind how it got there [to the current ownership].”
He said this while a large group of people sang and marched up and down Magnolia Road outside.
eNCA | Belgium under scrutiny over release of ‘radicalised’ convict before attack
BRUSSELS – Belgian authorities sought to deflect questions on Wednesday over the furlough of a convicted criminal, known to have been radicalised in jail, who killed three people in the Belgian city of Liege.
Just hours after his release, the man named by Belgian media as Benjamin Herman killed two policewomen and a bystander on Tuesday before being gunned down in what officials say was a terrorist attack. Police also suspect the 36-year-old of the murder of a former associate found dead at his home.
In and out of jail for a variety of crimes since 2003, Herman found a path to violence that has heightened concerns Europe’s prisons are incubators for radicalism.
He converted to Islam while in detention, a Belgian security source told Reuters, and was under suspicion of radicalisation.
In Belgium, a prisoner’s inclusion on a state security list as a suspected radical is not automatically communicated to all police or the prison service, experts say.
It was the fourteenth time since his detention that he was granted temporary leave, intended to help him prepare for eventual reintegration into society in 2020, Justice Minister Koen Geens told reporters.
“Everyone in Belgium is asking the same question: how is it possible that someone convicted for such serious acts was allowed to leave prisons?” Belgium’s deputy prime minister Alexander de Croo was cited by local media as saying.
Herman stabbed the policewomen, aged 45 and 53, from behind at around 10.30am on a boulevard in the centre of Belgium’s third biggest city, seized their handguns and shot both.
He shot dead a 22-year-old trainee teacher who was sitting in a car before entering a high school about 100 metres away and taking two female employees hostage.
The gunman was heard shouting “Allahu Akbar” — God is greatest in Arabic — when he burst from the school shooting at police, in a video shot by local residents.
Four police officers were wounded before the attacker was finally killed.
The national crisis centre, on high alert since past attacks by Islamic State in Paris and Brussels in the past three years, said it was monitoring events but had not raised its alert level, an indication follow-up attacks were not expected.
“I think it was just one individual that completely snapped and went on a killing spree,” said Pieter Van Ostaeyen, a specialist on jihadism who has maintained contacts with Belgians fighting in Syria. “I don’t think it was an organised attack.”
Reuters
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Sport24.co.za | Stick on Siya: I’d be in tears if I wasn’t a coach
Johannesburg – Springbok assistant coach Mzwandile Stick remembers the first piece of advice he ever gave to new national captain Siya Kolisi.
It was all the way back in 2010, when Kolisi had just arrived in Cape Town to start his new journey with Western Province.
The first meeting between the two came at the Western Province Rugby Institute in Stellenbosch, where Stick was still working with the national Sevens set-up.
“He is someone that I’ve followed since a young age. I have mentored him,” Stick said of Kolisi.
“I remember the day when he came to the Institute in Stellenbosch to join Western Province and I was there with the Sevens.
“One of the first things I told him … I said: ‘You know Siya, you are only in Stellenbosch for rugby. There is a lot of stuff happening around Stellenbosch and it’s a student town, so if you’re going to be on the streets too much that chances are you will lose what you’ve got now.'”
As it turns out, the young Kolisi would not get caught up in the party life, staying grounded as he began to manufacture a career that, this week, has reached new heights.
“Siya has a proper head on his shoulders. When I heard that he was going to be the captain of the Springboks, the first black captain, it’s something that has been coming,” said Stick.
“I think he’s got what it takes and when it comes to his leadership skills, we don’t doubt them at all.”
Stick acknowledged that, rugby aside, the appointment made him proud to be South African.
“It’s such a great honour, not only for Siya’s family or us in this Springbok team, but it’s such a great thing for South Africa,” he said.
“If I was not in the position that I am currently, I would probably be in tears sitting on the couch thinking about the way that Siya is getting this opportunity.”
Kolisi will lead the Boks in three Tests against England, starting on June 9.
Pieter-Steph du Toit, meanwhile, will also captain the Boks for the first time when they take on Wales in Washington DC this Saturday.
Kick-off is at 23:00 (SA time).
eNCA | Fedusa, cash-in-transit companies to meet over heists
JOHANNESBURG – The Federation of Unions of South Africa (Fedusa) is set to meet with cash-in-transit companies to discuss the increasing number of cash-in-transit heists.
Fedusa and the Motor Transport Workers’ Union will meet with employers in the sector in Johannesburg on Wednesday.
The unions want employers to supply crews with appropriately equipped cash vans, guns and ammunition.
They also want counselling services and sick leave for the victims of heists.
eNCA
Prioritising the health citizen in UHC
The concept of health citizenship integrates patients’ needs with the knowledge of healthcare professionals in planning tools and programmes that will change the inequalities in healthcare.
“A lot of research has been conducted in relation to UHC theory and policy evidence, and the implementation will require an inclusive process and for all stakeholders to collaborate in the interest of the health citizen. Our aim for this year’s conference is to map out priority areas for the health citizen and agree on implementable action items to ensure that private sector healthcare industry players across the region proactively gears towards UHC,” says Dr Katlego Mothudi, managing director, Board of Healthcare Funders of Southern Africa (BHF).
Private sector role
“A number of questions remain on how to overcome fragmentation in healthcare as African countries begin to make progress towards this global agenda to achieving access for all by 2030.
“How can the public and private sector scale up information systems and technology infrastructure to create access to health? We need to explore platforms that can be used to hear the voice of the marginalised, how we can incorporate the voice of civil society and business in the discourse? How do we answer to the inevitable consequence of the requirement to scale up quite rapidly as a response to the changing and merging of the two environments?”
According to Mothudi, there are a number of actions that the private sector can already begin to implement as priorities to meet the needs of the health citizen. These interventions can then address specific health challenges, as can the design of scheme benefits that actively improve overall health, risk pooling, cross subsidisation, as a way of enabling defragmentation of systems. Engagements are also required around the concept of strategic purchasing of healthcare services.
Speakers at the conference will include local role players, as well as experts from Egypt, Kenya, the USA, Singapore and Namibia, among others. “We can learn a lot through shared experiences and identifying what has worked in other countries, understanding how those systems have been implemented and adapt learnings to our context,” says Mothudi.
News24.com | Racism: you know it when you feel it
2018-05-30 07:47
If someone experiences an action or utterance as racist does it necessarily make it racist, or does the intention of the “perpetrator” make a difference in how harshly someone should be judged for their words or actions?
These questions have arisen with a renewed sense of urgency for me during the debate that erupted after Ashwin Willemse walked off the set of SuperSport recently.
Although I don’t want to debate the specifics around this case, it did raise fundamental questions about experience as well as the role of intention for me.
In certain cases of crude racism, such as the use of the k-word or explicit racial or sexual stereotyping there can be no debate. It is racist or sexist no matter what the perpetrator claims to have been the intention or circumstances. Thus, the courts could rule on Penny Sparrow’s tweets and Vicky Momberg’s outbursts.
Although there are undoubtedly many people who are still guilty of these overt incidences of racism, I believe it is the less crude forms of prejudice, which are so prevalent in our society, that often cause the biggest damage. It is in the tone of voice, the patronising smile, the body language, institutional cultures and systems. Yet, despite or perhaps because of its insidious nature it is often tolerated until some trigger causes a dramatic reaction.
As a white person, I have only on the very rare occasion experienced racism – and it was horrible. But as a woman, I deal with sexism on an almost daily basis. (I immediately want to acknowledge that I am conscious that I am at the tip of the pyramid of injustice. As a woman I experience sexism, but because of my race, class and sexual orientation I will always experience far less discrimination than, for example, a black, gay or poor woman.)
Although I experience crude sexism far less these days (perhaps men are a bit more careful around me), I can think of at least three instances in the last four days where I was patronised by men. I’m sure that all these men would argue that they did not intend to patronise me. Yet, it was without doubt patronising. How can I be so sure? Because, you know it when you feel it.
That is, for me, the key and part of the answer to my original question. If it is experienced as racist or sexist it almost certainly is. You know it when you feel it.
Of course, given upbringing and conditioning linked to our political history, it is also true that people honestly do not always understand that or why something they say or do is racist. Thus, they are honest in their defence of “I did not intend to be racist”. However, that can too easily become a blanket excuse. “I did not mean to kill that person” could still result in a manslaughter conviction in court. Equally, “I did not intend to patronise or racially abuse you” can never alleviate the burden of injury or need for restitution.
So what does restitution involve? On the most basic level it requires the willingness to listen and hear the “other” (both individually and collectively) when they express their pain, hurt and anger. There must be a willingness to accept the point of view of the person/s who have been offended, no matter what the intention was. So, not to say: “I did not intend it that way” or “don’t play the race card” as I so often hear people say. The listening should be followed by a sincere apology and measures or actions to fix the problem.
Importantly, we should remember that institutional and systemic racism and sexism are even more insidious and thus more difficult to pin down. However, they exist – big time. Those who feel them, know it. As with individual cases, systemic and institutional apologies as well as restitution are extremely important (think: land debate at the moment).
Of course, it does require that someone has to express the hurt or offense that was felt. Often that does not happen and when it finally does people are surprised and shocked.
I have to confess with all three cases of feeling and being(!) patronised I did not say or do anything. There are many reasons for it. I did not want to make a scene, I did not think it would change that person and sometimes I am just tired of fighting a bunch of sexists.
My guess is that many people who experience racism would give similar reasons for not always reacting.
But, I also know that even though I often don’t react to sexist behaviour, every incident finds a home in my body and mind where it quietly waits till the one day when I have just had enough. Enough of being patronised through words, body language and actions. Enough of a system that assumes that I am inferior, must earn less and behave in a certain way purely because I am a woman.
As many men would be able to testify, once I reached that point of “enoughness” I certainly did not just politely walk off “set”.
And so, when someone says, “I feel patronised” or “that is racist” we need to understand that it is always just the tip of the iceberg and all of us (individually and collectively) need to react in a manner that shows some humility and acceptance of our prejudices – intended or not.