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WATCH: Police disperse protesters in Westenburg

The police are currently on the scene and a video circulating on social media shows residents running for cover into a house as two loud bangs are heard. 

POLOKWANE – Members of the South African Police Service’s Public Order Policing Unit fired what seemed to be stun grenades to disperse a crowd of protesters in Westenburg.

Roads in and out of the area were blocked by burning tyres earlier this morning over apparent land claims by residents.

This resulted in motorists having to find alternative routes.

The police are currently on the scene and a video circulating on social media shows residents running for cover into a house as two loud bangs are heard outside.

The police can be seen armed with guns and attempt to clear the road with shovels as cars pass by.

Ward 19 residents and claimants of land in extension 40 want the Polokwane Municipality to share the land among them.

In 2010, the municipality gave former Disteneng residents the land but interdicted Ward 19 residents from occupying it, as they wanted a portion of it, a resident told the Polokwane Observer.

The claimants were removed from Disteneng by the municipality because it allegedly wanted to preserve the land for industrial purposes.

However, after their removal, the protesters say it was sold to a private investor who turned it into a residential area.

Read the full story in next week’s Observer.

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Raeesa Sempe

Raeesa Sempe is a Caxton Award-winning Digital Editor with nine years’ experience in the industry. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Media Studies from the University of the Witwatersrand and started her journey as a community journalist for the Polokwane Review in 2015. She then became the online journalist for the Review in 2016 where she excelled in solidifying the Review’s digital footprint through Facebook lives, content creation and marketing campaigns. Raeesa then moved on to become the News Editor of the Bonus Review in 2019 and scooped up the Editorial Employee of the Year award in the same year. She is the current Digital Editor of the Polokwane Review-Observer, a position she takes pride in. Raeesa is married with one child and enjoys spending time with friends, listening to music and baking – when she has the time. “I still believe that if your aim is to change the world, journalism is a more immediate short-term weapon. – Tom Stoppard

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