Life In Covid, A Land Grab Settlement In South Africa : Goats and Soda : NPR

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Izwelethu, also known as “Covid,” is an illegal settlement outside Cape Town comprising more than 800 tin shacks and 3,000-plus residents. It was started in March, when South Africa’s national lockdown began. Some roofs are secured with bricks. With the winds of summer now blowing, more bricks will likely be needed.

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Izwelethu, also known as “Covid,” is an illegal settlement outside Cape Town comprising more than 800 tin shacks and 3,000-plus residents. It was started in March, when South Africa’s national lockdown began. Some roofs are secured with bricks. With the winds of summer now blowing, more bricks will likely be needed.

Samantha Reinders for NPR

If you ask Alfred Sonandi where he lives, he’ll tell you Izwelethu.

“It sounds nice,” he says. “It means ‘Our Land’ in Xhosa [one of South Africa’s 11 languages]. But to be honest, almost everyone here calls it ‘Covid.’ And ‘nice’ is not really the word I’d use …”

Alfred Sonandi plays around with a makeshift barbell — concrete poured into two tins on either end of a stick. People in the settlement of Covid don’t usually wear masks: Living in such close quarters, they may (incorrectly) feel there’s no point. They do mask up in public places where masking is mandatory.

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Alfred Sonandi plays around with a makeshift barbell — concrete poured into two tins on either end of a stick. People in the settlement of Covid don’t usually wear masks: Living in such close quarters, they may (incorrectly) feel there’s no point. They do mask up in public places where masking is mandatory.

Samantha Reinders for NPR

Izwelethu, also known as “Covid,” is a densely populated settlement in South Africa comprising more than 800 tin shacks and 3,000-plus residents. It was founded in March, when South Africa’s national lockdown began, and has been weathering a number of storms ever since — the meteorological ones that the “Cape of Storms” is infamous for, and the grim epidemiological storm of a global pandemic.

The shacks bump up against the township of Mfuleni on one side and the Kuils River on the other. Standing on Covid’s sandy hilltop, you can see Table Mountain in the distance.

In the first weeks of June all you could hear in Covid was hammering — the ear-piercing repetition of hammers on sheet metal and nails being driven into wood. You had to raise your voice to be heard.

With a new spot staked out, a group of men set about setting up a shack using readymade parts of tin as well as improvised materials. They’ll finish the job in just a few hours.

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A month later that sound had faded into the background as the sounds of everyday life took over: kids laughing, a soccer ball being kicked, music pumping from a tavern.

It’s a rough metaphor for the COVID-19 pandemic: The panic that gripped South Africa in those early days has fast become the new normal here.

Kids play in the alleys of the Covid settlement.

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Covid is just one of many new settlements that have sprung up on the outskirts of Cape Town since the lockdown began, on March 27. It’s a boom that’s continuing today: If you drive along the main highway from the airport to the city on, say, a Tuesday, you’ll probably see a handful of new shacks on the side of the road. By the weekend there might be more than 50 — even a hundred.

Shack-building entrepreneurs — especially those who sell the tin sheets that are used as walls and roofs — have been making a killing here. So, too, have the various pop-up industries that support people moving from one place to another — ad hoc moving companies, merchants who sell household goods and food vendors, among others.

A man paints the newly opened Mazaleni tuck shop in Covid. It sells a mix of products, from soap to matches to chips. In the foreground men drink at a outdoor shabeen — an unlicensed bar.

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Cars are in high demand here. Small vehicles piled high with a family’s worldly possessions, moving in and out of the new settlements, are a common sight. And with little to no running water in Covid and other newly erected townships, the vendors who sell big buckets — to people who now have to walk long distances to fetch water — are also thriving.

In a way, some say, this has all happened before. So-called land invasions are old hat in South Africa: The country, after all, is built on a centuries-long legacy of land dispossession.

Most recently Apartheid in many ways created the massive economic divisions in current day South Africa. Those who are too poor have found a place to live by any means necessary.

Noluthanda Gwanya and her daughter Inathi Sigijimi, 12. A storm the night before flooded their shack and blew off the roof, and they had to shelter with friends. “I don’t want promises anymore. Just take us to the right place. We’re hungry in the head and in the stomach,” said Gwanya.

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According to those now in power, and the country’s mainstream press, a version of that is what’s going on now: Since the coronavirus hit, there’s been a staggering rise in “land invasions.”

In Cape Town, the reason is obvious: Many of the city’s economically vulnerable township citizens lost their jobs and income when the country went into lockdown. Those already living in shacks, often in the backyards of other homes, could no longer afford their rent. So they looked for land where they could erect new shacks and live rent-free. Next to Covid, for example, is a settlement called “Sanitizer.” There’s also one called “19” (as in COVID-19). It’s an example of the sardonic South African sense of humor.

Masakhe Nolakoza, a traditional healer, has lived in Covid since early April. He previously lived in a shack in someone’s backyard in Mfuleni, the neighboring township. His business has not been good in the new location. “People are losing hope and only thinking of basics for now,” he said.

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The places that bear these morbidly comic names have caused an uproar in South Africa. Heated arguments about them have been taking place everywhere, from dinner tables and provincial meetings to the highest courtrooms in the country.

Some of the settlements don’t last very long. As soon a new one is erected, it may be torn down by teams of the Anti-Land Invasion Unit — the largest law-enforcement operation in the City of Cape Town, whose members wear riot gear and wield shotguns — plus contract workers and city employees.

On an otherwise quiet Sunday in August, the Anti-Land Invasion Unit arrived at the settlement next to Covid and, without warning to the community, proceeded to tear it down. Contract workers employed by the city carried the big pieces of tin to two waiting trucks.

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When these homes are destroyed, possessions are trampled on or thrown in the dirt. The metal sheets used as walls and roofs are confiscated and loaded onto large trucks. If an angry crowd forms, authorities use rubber bullets to disperse it.

Contract workers hired by the authorities tear down a settlement.

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The township communities’ outrage over the destruction of these nearby settlements boiled over into violence in the middle of the winter, when, on July 1, a video — so disturbing that local news stations preceded it with a warning — went viral. At a time when the government was telling citizens to stay in their homes, a naked man named Bulelani Qolani was seen being dragged from his makeshift house as it was razed by the Anti-Land Invasion Unit.

The unit has been extremely busy since this graphic incident took place. According to Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato, it has removed more than 55,000 structures in about 30 parts of the metro area. “There have been well over 100 separate land-invasion incidents recorded,” he says.

Possessions were strewn in the dirt after a settlement near Covid was dismantled by the authorities. In many cases, settlement residents will rebuild within days of such a local government action.

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But those who live in Cape Town’s new settlements say they’re not “invading” anyone.

“[The language that officials use makes] it sound like a war,” says Thembile Gatyeni, one of several community-appointed leaders in Covid. “They use these words [like]’invasion,’ ‘siege,’ ‘land-grabbing.’ But we’re not here to fight or cause trouble for the city. We just need a piece of land to live [on]. A place to call our own. A place where we don’t have to pay rent. We’re not an invading army.”

Thembile Gatyeni is one of several community-appointed leaders in Covid. Each leader is responsible for a specific neighborhood and may go door-to-door to collect money for running water, food distribution and other services. These leaders are the go-to people for any complaints.

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Thembile Gatyeni is one of several community-appointed leaders in Covid. Each leader is responsible for a specific neighborhood and may go door-to-door to collect money for running water, food distribution and other services. These leaders are the go-to people for any complaints.

Samantha Reinders for NPR

The people who live on the sandy stretches that comprise Covid are here out of desperation, not choice. While they may have a piece of tin over their heads at night (at least for now), their community has no electricity or sanitation services. Only a few taps have running water.

Plato says the spaces these people are “invading” are actually “public land earmarked for housing, health care, schools, transport and basic services.” If they would only get off it, he promises, the city would build them a better community.

Orripah Dlali, age 86, is one of the oldest residents of Covid. She lives with her grandson, who lost his construction job due to the lockdown. They moved together to Covid when they couldn’t afford the rent on their previous residence.

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Covid residents say that history has given them little reason to believe him. Every election cycle, the government promises housing and services for all. But these promises, residents say, are never kept.

“And next year won’t be any different,” says Covid resident Noxolo Nondala. “[Politicians will] come for their [votes] and promise us houses, but the houses just never come. We’ve been waiting since 1994″—the year that Nelson Mandela came to power, South African democracy was born, and “things were supposed to change.”

Two men help Noxolo Nondala build her home in Covid. She previously lived in the township of Khayalitsha, where she had been a backyard dweller, renting a structure that was literally in someone’s backyard. Although she liked her life in Khayalitsha, she said she moved to Covid “because it had more space. And for now, in COVID times, that was more important. This is my best option for now.”

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In late August, the Cape Town High Court issued an interim interdict barring city officials from evicting illegal land occupiers from their shacks without first obtaining a court order. The interdict is slated to remain in place for the duration of the national lockdown, which now has been extended through mid-December. The city has appealed the ruling.

The news from the court in August failed to lighten the mood in Covid. When the interdict came down, rain did too, in droves — days and days of rain that flooded hundreds of shacks. Many residents were forced to flee in the middle of the night as their shacks filled with water, leaving them sleepless and homeless, helpless and exhausted.

Nomthandazo Tyikiane (in the towel) and Siphamandala Tebekwana survey the damage done by the Kuils River the night before during a storm. Tyikiane’s shack was destroyed so she was sleeping at a friends. “This place is like the wild,” she said. On the other side of the river is a reserve owned by Cape Nature.

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Yet the residents of Covid, and other new settlements like it, did what they’ve always done before: They dried themselves and their belongings off and started another day.

Days have since stretched into weeks. Summer and the Cape’s infamous seasonal winds have brought new challenges for those whose homes are made of tin.

Covid resident Linda Maseko, whose shack has not been blown over (so far), counts herself among the lucky ones. In fact, she says, the six-month anniversary of her life in Covid passed by relatively uneventfully. “A good thing,” she says. “No cops or dramas, for now. But it’ll come … down the road.”

Many residents don’t having proper cooking facilities in their shacks (or money to buy items in bulk). So street food is common. Linda Maseko (left, wearing jeans) has a bite with other residents.

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In the meantime, an air of permanence has started to settle over Covid’s dusty streets. “People are realizing that, like it or not, we’re here to stay,” says Maseko.

More and more informal shops run out of people’s homes are opening, including Maseko’s (she sells small decanted bottles of paraffin, which is used for home cooking or lighting). People have put up photographs on the walls of their shacks and enrolled their children in nearby schools for the coming school year.

As people settle into their shacks in Covid, they start to unpack small comforts that make a place feel like home. Sivuyile Duma put up photos of his brothers and friends. “If I’m going to be here permanently I want to make it feel like home,” said Duma.

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As with the pandemic itself, no one knows what will happen next — next week, next month, next year. Along with that strange feeling of permanence, Sonandi says, “remains a feeling of unease.”

Some think that when South Africa’s National State of Disaster ends and the court’s interdict falls away, evictions are likely to resume, and conflict between residents and the Anti-Land Invasion Unit will begin again.

“But we’re trying to just think of today,” Sonandi says. “Today, we’re still just asking the city for sanitation. We’re desperate for toilets. We’re desperate for dignity.”

A woman and her daughter walk through the streets of Covid.

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Samantha Reinders is a photojournalist based in South Africa. She divides her time between Cape Town and a farm in her beloved Karoo desert with Angora goats, four rabbits and a grumpy turkey. You can see more of her work on www.samreinders.com and @samreinders on Instagram.

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