The
Red Location Museum in New Brighton, built to honour anti-apartheid
heroes but closed by residents since 2013, may soon be reopened. But the
museum has been badly damaged by vandals.
The museum, built at a cost of R22m, has won several
international architecture awards. Its structure is similar to the
surrounding informal settlements and is made of 12 corrugated iron
boxes. It was opened on November 10 2006.
But residents closed down the museum in protest over a housing
dispute. They wanted their defective 48 square metre RDP houses, built
in 1998, to be rebuilt, but the Nelson Mandela Bay municipality and the
provincial department of human settlements said the houses could only be
rebuilt at 40 square metres. Residents said this was too small and shut
down the museum in protest.
As negotiations dragged on, the museum was vandalised and guards were
attacked. A guard was killed in 2014. Electric cables have been ripped
out, expensive photographs of struggle heroes and the museum vehicle
have been stolen, metal sheets and aluminium pipes have been taken and
sewerage pipes have been removed, leaving smelly sewage leaks.
Thando Msikinya of the Red Location Working Committee said: “We shut
down the museum because we deserve better living conditions. But thugs
are vandalising our museum. We cannot fold our arms and let our museum
be destroyed.”
Masiza Mazizi, spokesperson for human settlements MEC Nonkqubela
Pieters, said negotiations over the rebuilding of the houses were now
over and approvals had been signed. Msikinya confirmed that the
committee had received a letter via the ward councillor that their
housing demands had been approved and as a result the museum could be
reopened.
Msikinya said the committee had other demands which it would negotiate with the municipality once the museum had been opened.
“We are having sleepless nights because thugs are looting our
museum,” said Msikinya. “These criminals are armed and dangerous. In
2014 they shot and killed a guard patrolling the museum outside. From
there they looted the power substation of the museum and left the
building in darkness.”
Since then, he says, the vandals have not stopped.
“The palisade fence has been vandalised. Doors, photographs and metal
sheets, air conditioners, lights and electric cables have been stolen.
We saw a photo of Oom Govan Mbeki in one of the pawn shops in Dasi. We
saw 15 metal sheets at one of the scrap yards in Deal Party. Then we
recovered nine library chairs from one of the local taverns.
“In September this year a Mazda 323 that was used for museum
deliveries was stolen. It had been parked inside the museum since its
closure. The storeroom where the wealth of this museum was kept has been
destroyed,” Msikinya said.
He said guards alone could not deal with the vandalism. “Our guards
are not safe here. We ask them to call us when they see anything
suspicious or hear any vandalism at the museum. But it is not easy to go
and patrol on that side because is too dark. These thugs are armed with
knives, axes and pangas. They know the ins and outs of this building.
“Kids are painting on the walls and writing rude remarks while some relieve themselves here at the museum.”
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