Despite a moratorium on evictions, tenants unable to pay rent are having utilities shut off and being kicked out of their homes
Coronavirus is changing the world in unprecedented ways. Subscribe here for a daily briefing on how this global crisis is affecting cities, technology, approaches to climate change, and the lives of vulnerable people.
By Kim Harrisberg
JOHANNESBURG, April 24 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - From demolished shacks to water and electricity shutoffs, South Africa's coronavirus lockdown is worsening the country's housing crisis, despite government orders to suspend evictions, residents and activists warned.
With many unable to work or pay rent since stay-at-home orders went into effect on March 27, shack dwellers and renters are particularly vulnerable to having their utilities shut off or being evicted from their homes, rights groups say.
Coronavirus: our latest stories
"My children are living in darkness," said Deborah, a single mother of six from the Democratic Republic of Congo living in inner-city Johannesburg, adding her landlord cut her water and electricity in early April when she couldn't pay the rent.
"It is stressful. My children look up to me and I am struggling to make ends meet," said Deborah, who sells second-hand clothes on the street and has been unable to earn a living since the five-week lockdown began.
On Thursday, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said lockdown measures would be gradually eased from May 1.
More than 3,900 people in South Africa are reported to have been infected by the respiratory disease and at least 75 have died, according a Reuters tally.
Those working in the informal economy - about 18% of the workforce - and living in crowded shacks in townships have been left with little financial protection, said activists.
"All inequalities are being exposed by the virus," said Axolile Notywala, general secretary for the Social Justice Coalition, a local charity.
The government has issued a directive that municipalities must suspend all evictions and water cuts until the lockdown is lifted.
But since the beginning of the lockdown landlords have evicted or illegally cut water and electricity for some 80 households who couldn't pay rent across the country, said the Legal Resources Centre - a legal aid charity - and others.
And earlier this month, authorities began demolishing shacks in Cape Town, Durban, Ekurhuleni and other cities, according to local media and rights groups.
The demolition of at least 49 shacks in Cape Town's Khayelitsha township gathered attention last week when the Legal Resources Centre challenged the city in court over the move, according to legal documents seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Malusi Booi, a member of the city's Mayoral Committee for Human Settlements, said that the demolished shacks were unoccupied and had been built illegally.
"The COVID-19 pandemic cannot be used to justify lawlessness and unlawful behaviour," Booi said in a statement this month, referring to what he called "land invasions" in the township.
On April 17 the Cape Town High Court ruled that the city was to return building materials to residents so they could rebuild some of the demolished homes on the same land, on the basis that no additional homes are built.
Notywala said many of the destroyed shacks were built by people unable to pay rent after losing their jobs under the lockdown.
INFORMAL ECONOMY
Two days before the lockdown started, the city of Johannesburg announced it would reconnect water and electricity of any residents who had previously had their utilities cut due to non-payment.
Yet some landlords have taken the matter into their own hands, cutting off reconnected water and electricity supplies in response to unpaid rent.
Even outside of the coronavirus pandemic, landlords cannot legally shut off a tenant's utilities without a court order according to the Rental Housing Act.
Many of the affected tenants are refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants, said Abigail Dawson, communications officer for the non-profit Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (CoRMSA).
"(They) often live a transient life in South Africa's cities, working in the informal economy and finding homes they can afford from month-to-month," she said in emailed comments.
"The informal economy has also been in lockdown, creating a major challenge for people trying to survive this period. Having a home has become life-saving in protecting oneself from COVID-19."
CoRMSA are working with other charities to take eviction cases to the renting housing tribunal, a provincial body that regulates issues between landlords and their tenants.
The tribunal's offices have been closed during the lockdown and emails have gone unanswered, said Edward Molopi, a researcher for the Socio-Economic Rights Institute (SERI) of South Africa, a housing rights charity.
SERI, CoRMSA and other rights groups said they would continue trying to reach the tribunal during and after the lockdown.
RIOTS AND PROTESTS
Dawson said the South African government had made an important and unprecedented move in making people stay at home to flatten the COVID-19 curve, but "the state has the mandate to ensure this is possible".
With at least one more week of lockdown ahead, Notywala, the human rights advocate, worries that poor access to housing, water and food will increase the chances of more people contracting the virus.
And that will lead to fear and frustration that could heighten unrest among the city's townships, he added.
Riots and protests have already broken out in Mitchells Plain, a township in Cape Town, and in Johannesburg's Alexandra township over promised food parcels that never arrived, according to local media.
"How is a lockdown practical for those in townships, or for the homeless?" Notywala said. "Being able to survive this lockdown is a luxury."
As Deborah - whose name was changed to protect her identity - waits for someone to turn the water and lights back on at her home in Johannesburg, she is nervous for what the next few months will bring.
"We appeal to landlords to understand that it is not that we don't want to pay," she said. "It is simply that we do not have the ability to do so."
Related stories:
South Africans volunteer to keep rhino orphanage going during lockdown
Death-defying S. African lauded for defence of land and women
In abandoned Cape Town hospital, squeezed residents heal wounds of gentrification
(Reporting by Kim Harrisberg @kimharrisberg; Editing by Jumana Farouky and Zoe Tabary. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.