Avatar photo

By News24 Wire

Wire Service


‘We’re hoping the court will be fair to us’ – Cape Town refugees’ wait to hear fate continues

The City wants an order prohibiting the sit-in and the flouting of health and safety by-laws, alleging that the group was affecting business in the area.


The court case between the City of Cape Town and the refugees and asylum seekers living in the Central Methodist Mission Church on Greenmarket Square has been postponed to next week owing to a lack of documentation compiled for the court.

The case was meant to be heard on Wednesday, having been last heard on 13 December. But it has since been postponed to 28 January.

According to Crispin Mongwe, a spokesperson for the refugees and asylum seekers, the delay is because documentation hasn’t been filed with the court. At the case’s previous hearing, Jean-Pierre Balous represented the refugees and asylum seekers.

There has since been a rift in the group, with many questioning his motives. He was arrested on New Year’s Day on eight charges of assault, including five of assault with the intent to do grievous bodily harm. He has since been granted bail, but is not allowed to set foot in Cape Town’s central business district, where Greenmarket Square is situated.

The leader of the group opposing Balous, Papi Sukami, is also out on bail after his arrest on two robbery charges. Mongwe said they had already appointed a committee to represent them in the court case.

The City wants an order prohibiting the sit-in and the flouting of health and safety by-laws, alleging that the group was affecting business in the area. It also alleged that people had urinated and defecated in the streets, cooked over open fires, washed clothes and bathed around the church area, contributing to fire risks.

“All of us are hoping for the court to be fair to us,” said Mongwe.

A common complaint is the lack of ablution facilities, with men concerned about the effect of this on their wives and children. The more than 600 foreign nationals sought refuge in the church after police forcefully dispersed a sit-in protest near the offices of the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in October.

They want the UNHCR to remove them from South Africa because of xenophobic attacks last year.

Several of the refugees or asylum seekers who spoke to News24 expressed frustration with the UNHCR’s perceived lack of assistance.

For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.

Read more on these topics

City of Cape Town(COCT) Greenmarket Square

For more news your way

Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.