Residents complained they did not have basic services. SA Human Rights Commission researcher Zamantungwa Mbeki said that due to numerous complaints, the commission would be conducting a site visit today to investigate and assess the situation. The shacks are made of zinc sheets and the doors do not lock. Each house has one tiny window and their size can hardly fit a double bed. There is no electricity and the 27 people there rely on a single communal tap and a few mobile toilets. Some of the houses have gaping holes between the ceiling and the holding wall. Nonkwa Ngcobu, 27, from the Eastern Cape, had been living at the recreation centre with her two children for two months before being relocated. She was one of more than 100 people who were displaced when fire engulfed the Usindiso building in the Joburg CBD, leaving 77 dead. "It's not nice to live here in these shacks because they are not big enough to accommodate my family. Even looking at the ground, the water might seep in under the door when it rains because of the gaping space under it door . "We are mostly women here with only two men to keep us safe. There is no security and our doors cannot lock." She said she had received a call on Tuesday that city officials were at the recreation centre removing people in vans. "No one told us anything, no warning, nothing. "The immigration officers were checking for people's identities using a biometric machine. I tried asking for my belongings but they said they had put everything into the truck and they shoved me into the van before driving off." She said illegal foreigners were taken to Jeppe police station, while the rest were relocated to the shacks. Reabetswe Mandoro, 21, said the relocation was inhumane. "I arrived at the centre and everything was packed up. I had hid the little money I had in my mattress and now it's gone. We weren't safe at the centre and now its even worse. There's a men's hostel just down the road and there is no gate to keep us safe," City of Joburg human settlements spokesperson Neo Goba said: "The city relocated the fire victims to a transitional relocation area TRA located in Denver. Note that this TRA is next door to the Denver informal settlement. The beneficiaries were notified of the relocation on Monday," said Goba. "The Denver TRA will be linked to the upgrading of the informal settlement programme for the Denver informal settlement, where services such as water, sewer and electrical infrastructure will be constructed. "So, the services will be installed, and more so the city is in the process of acquiring land to assist with the mixed housing development for this community," said Goba. He did not respond when asked how much the city had paid for the structures. Dale McKinley, spokesperson at Kopanang Africa Against Xenophobia, said there was no warning given to the victims, the NGO or the social workers who were working with the victims. "This was something that the city and the department of home affairs decided to do on their own. We were contacted by the people from the centre telling us that officials were there packing their belongings," said McKinley. He said the City of Joburg explained the reason behind the move as the centre was always a temporary solution. "But what they City o Joburg didn't indicate was what was going to happen to those who lost their documentation in the fire beforehand. And this is the most outrageous thing as far as we are concerned. They have gone to arrest everyone who cannot be documented, knowing well enough they lost their documentation in the fire." Rows of shacks built by the City of Johannesburg for the relocation of victims of the Marshalltown building fire.
Source: Sowetan