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I won't respond to threats‚ Cape Town deputy mayor tells golf course invaders

Margaret Hayes, 80, turns a symbolic sod in one of the bunkers at Rondebosch Golf Club during the Reclaim the City occupation on Thursday.
Margaret Hayes, 80, turns a symbolic sod in one of the bunkers at Rondebosch Golf Club during the Reclaim the City occupation on Thursday.
Image: Reclaim the City

The deputy mayor of Cape Town refused to meet housing activists who occupied a Cape Town golf course on Thursday.

Reclaim the City protesters demanded the presence of Ian Neilson at Rondebosch Golf Club‚ but he told SowetanLIVE sister publication TimesLIVE he would not respond to threats.

The club featured prominently this week in a document from another NGO‚ Ndifuna Ukwazi‚ which said it was a prime example of the way the City of Cape Town made inefficient use of land suitable for affordable housing.

The club pays R1‚000 a year to rent 45ha between the M5 and the Black River‚ and its 25-year lease expires in 2020.

Neilson said: "We do not accept their actions as acceptable to the rules of engagement. In any case‚ their entire campaign is misplaced.

"The limiting factor in the provision of housing is not land‚ but funds for development."

The deputy mayor said more than 1‚000ha was earmarked for homes in Cape Town.

"When the national government (the constitutional authority for providing housing) provides the city and the province with adequate funds‚ that land will be developed."

International holidaymakers were among golfers who had to abandon their rounds on Thursday when Reclaim the City activists - numbering between 150 and 400‚ according to different sources - entered the course through a back gate.

Club general manager Don Ball said he cleared the course for golfers' safety.

Reclaim the City spokesperson Zacharia Mashele said the protesters were "shocked to see how beautiful [the golf course] is inside. An oasis in the heart of our city with open fields‚ trees and rivers."

He added: "It’s clear our best public land has been captured by a few wealthy people while the majority of black and coloured residents continue to live on the outskirts of the city‚ far from good infrastructure‚ services and job opportunities.

"We gathered at the club house. The manager understood our struggles. He closed the club for the day and sent the golfers home. He gave us water and listened to our speeches. Our fellow residents are not our target."

Mashele said the oldest protester‚ homeless 80-year-old Margaret Hayes‚ "turned the first sod on our affordable housing project".

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