R2K: The right to protest denied for the opening of Parliament!

10th February 2016

R2K: The right to protest denied for the opening of Parliament!

R2K  is appalled by the City of Cape Town’s decision to deny our right to protest. The City, SAPS and SANDF have shut down parliament and the surrounding areas by not allowing any protest action anywhere near the opening of Parliament.

R2K had notified the municipality that we intend to protest with banners on the Father John Oliver footbridge which MPs and the President must pass under on their way to Parliament. The City has said “No permission will be granted” for protests on the footbridges.

The nearest protest action will be 600 metres away from Parliament, far away from the red carpet where MPs and government ministers parade for the cameras. This securitisation of Parliament is completely unacceptable.

We would rather take our voices somewhere else. On Thursday, 11 February 2016, R2K Western Cape activists will be picketing over the N2 on Bunga Avenue, Langa, between 7AM - 9AM and in the afternoon from 3PM - 5PM. The right to organise, protest and speak out is central to all community struggles for social justice. We demand that the government respect this right!

While the President prepares to deliver his State of the National Address R2K will protest the continued appetite for secrecy by the President, the security structures he leads and from within the private sector.

The Bunga Avenue bridge represent the connections and continuities in our divided society. Between a violent past controlled by a secret state apparatus and a present in which many state institutions are actively countering freedoms such as our Right2Know.  The bridge also represent the link between corporate secrecy and the illegal movement of R300billion offshore annually – which is predicted to lead to increased austerity and a cut in social spending during the Minister of Finances budget address later this month.

This year’s SONA takes place against the backdrop of a deepening economic and social crisis. While government has increased spending on social grants to reduce extreme poverty, on the whole government policies have failed to create a conducive environment for democracy and have instead produced growing inequality and poverty. According to a recent StatsSA report, at least one in five South Africans live below the poverty line and cannot afford food, let alone sufficient access to information, telecommunications or the commercial media.

As R2K we demand:

 

The President needs to understand that the youth and all South Africans are tired of hearing the same rhetoric without seeing any positive results.

The Right2Know Campaign believes it is time government put the people first and invest in our democracy.  We must return to the vision of a people centred, people driven development. In particular we call on the President to advance the right to know.

We call on all South Africans to stand up, defend our hard won democracy and make it work for the people.

 

Issued by Right2Know