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Masiphumelele

Suburb of Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa


Suburb of Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

FieldValue
nameMasiphumelele
image_skylineCape-town-masiphumelele-township-road-sign-ef-24-70mm-f28l-5d-cr-4611.jpg
image_captionRoad sign in Masiphumelele township
pushpin_mapSouth Africa Western Cape#South Africa
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSouth Africa
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Western Cape
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_type3Municipality
subdivision_name3City of Cape Town
subdivision_type4Main Place
established_titleEstablished
leader_titleCouncillor
area_footnotes
area_total_km20.39
population_footnotes
population_total15969
population_as_of2011
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Racial makeup (2011)
demographics1_footnotes
demographics1_title1Black African
demographics1_info189.4%
demographics1_title2Coloured
demographics1_info21.8%
demographics1_title3Indian/Asian
demographics1_info30.2%
demographics1_title4White
demographics1_info40.2%
demographics1_title5Other
demographics1_info58.5%
demographics_type2First languages (2011)
demographics2_footnotes
demographics2_title1Xhosa
demographics2_info158.1%
demographics2_title2English
demographics2_info27.6%
demographics2_title3Afrikaans
demographics2_info32.8%
demographics2_title4Sotho
demographics2_info41.6%
demographics2_title5Other
demographics2_info529.9%
timezone1SAST
utc_offset1+2
postal_code_typePostal code (street)
postal_code7975
postal2_code_typePO box
area_code_typeArea code

Masiphumelele is a township on the Cape Peninsula, South Africa, situated between Kommetjie, Capri Village and Noordhoek.

Initially known as Site 5, the township was renamed Masiphumelele by its residents, which is a Xhosa word meaning "let us succeed".

About 400-500 people first settled in the area in the 1980s. During apartheid residents were continually removed to the suburb of Khayelitsha, over 30 km away, but the numbers began to grow as apartheid began to unravel from 1990.

In 1990, about 8000 residents lived in the area, mostly in shacks, but by 2005, over 26000 people lived there, many in brick homes. In 2010, the population was estimated at 38000. Many are from the old Ciskei bantustan in the Eastern Cape.

Amenities are scarce, with an overcrowded school, no police station, and an understaffed day clinic, while it is estimated that 23-28% of the community are infected with HIV, many of whom also have TB. SHAWCO, the University of Cape Town Student's Health And Welfare Centres Organisation, runs weekly supplementary clinics from the Masiphumelele clinic.

History

Masiphumelele has been the site of numerous protests over the years. Most of the protests have been connected to service delivery and anger over corruption in government housing projects.

On May 12, 2008, a series of riots started in the township of Alexandra (in the north-eastern part of Johannesburg) when locals attacked migrants from Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe. Many African nationals were threatened, assaulted and displaced in the wave of Xenophobic violence that swept through South Africa, and in the following weeks the violence spread to Cape Town. Thousands of foreigners were displaced from Masiphumelele in the attacks of May 2008, most landing up at Soetwater refugee camp. Several days after immigrant-owned shops were looted and foreigners attacked, Masiphumelele residents publicly apologised and asked them to return.

On May 2, 2011, a fire that started around 1 am engulfed and burned down an estimated 1500 informal and formal residences. The fire killed one and displaced an estimated 5000 people.

High rates of violent crime and a lack of appropriate policing in the area resulted in serious protest action by the community in 2015.

References

References

  1. "Sub Place Masiphumelele". Census 2011.
  2. "MasiCorp Demographics". MasihumeleleCorporation.
  3. "Living Hope Masi Page". Living Hope.
  4. "Fears of more service delivery protests". Cape Times.
  5. "Burning message to the state in the fire of poor's rebellion". BusinessDay.
  6. (2008-05-12). "South African mob kills migrants". BBC.
  7. (2008-05-21). "SA leader orders army to deploy". BBC.
  8. "Tutu applauds Masiphumelele". Independent Online.
  9. Mortlock, Monique. (September 2015). "Masiphumelele reiterates calls for proper policing".
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