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Reclaim The City

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Reclaim The City (RTC) is a South African non-racial social movement campaigning for land and housing in Cape Town's inner-city and wealthy suburbs.

Reclaim The City is known for its campaigns for affordable and low-income housing as well as spearheading the occupation of two empty and dilapidated government buildings which it turned into housing for poor and vulnerable families.[1]

Tafelberg Campaign

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Reclaim The City began first as a campaign against the state's sale of a piece of land in Sea Point called Tafelberg to be used for a private school. The movement and its supporters demanded that the land instead be used for affordable housing. With the help of the NGO Ndifuna Ukwazi, they took the Western Cape Government as well as the City of Cape Town to court to stop the sale. They were successful in the Cape High Court with the judgment setting aside the sale.

According to reports, "The court declare[d] that the Province and City have failed in their constitutional duties to provide access to adequate housing and to land on an equitable basis. In doing so, they have 'failed to take adequate steps to redress spatial apartheid in central Cape Town.'"[2][3] The judgment is currently being appealed to a higher court. RTC is now calling for government to respect the high court ruling and put in place a plan to build affordable housing on the site.[4][5]

Occupations of Cissie Gool House and Ahmed Kathrada House

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Reclaim The City, along with evicted and houseless residents of the inner city in Cape Town, occupied the old unused Woodstock Hospital in March 2017. They turned the property into a housing occupation for hundreds of families.[6][7] The occupation has been likened to a modern-day commune in the image of the famous Paris Commune of 1871.[8]

Also in March 2017, Reclaim The City spearheaded a second occupation, that of the former Helen Bowden Nurses Home in the wealthy suburb of Green Point in Cape Town. The property was turned into housing for a few hundred families.[9]

Both occupations have been called a "tool to hold government to account"[10] and have been referred to as "the only affordable housing opportunities for poor and working-class people in the metro".[11]

References

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  1. ^ Urson, Ruth; Kessi, Shose; Daya, Shari (2022). "Towards Alternative Spatial Imaginaries: The Case of 'Reclaim the City'". Decolonial Enactments in Community Psychology. pp. 167–190. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-75201-9_9. ISBN 978-3-030-75200-2.
  2. ^ Victory for housing activists in landmark Tafelberg case, James Stent, Groundup, 30 August 2020
  3. ^ Understanding the groundbreaking Tafelberg judgment , Daniel Linde, Groundup, 9 September 2020
  4. ^ Activists demand that Sea Point plot is converted for social housing, Mia Arderne, Daily Maverick, 30 August 2022
  5. ^ Calls to speed up release of the Tafelberg site for affordable housing, Mthuthuzeli Ntseku, Cape Argus, 29 August 2022
  6. ^ Hospital now turned to home, News24, 29 January 2019
  7. ^ Residents, not occupiers, live at Cissie Gool House, Mia Arderne, New Frame, 2 March 2022
  8. ^ Cissie Gool House, a modern-day Commune, Darryl Accone, New Frame, 25 March 2021
  9. ^ How Cape residents turned a former hospital into a 'cosmopolitan community', Claire Keeton, TimesLive, 28 November 2021
  10. ^ Occupations are the tool to hold government to account, say housing activists, Aisha Abdool Karim, News24, 21 October 2019
  11. ^ Occupations are the tool to hold government to account, say housing activists, Tariro Washinyira, News24, 18 July 2022
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Further reading

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