When inspecting a building, you can't just look in one window and expect to get a feel for the whole place. To understand every nook and cranny, every pipe and wall, you have to walk through the entire building and then give an assessment after careful study. The issue of Rondebosch Common has lent itself to a series of brief glimpses through the ground-floor window of a very large building.
At present, there seems to be a curious exercise of retrospective condemnation of the City taking place, especially in light of this last Saturday's events on the Common. There, the leader of the opposition in the City Council, Cllr. Tony Ehrenreich, in his dual role as COSATU provincial secretary, staged an event with Mario Wanza and a range of community organisations.
Their event, though sparsely attended, was lawful. The City accepted the memorandum drafted. People went home.
Now, this event is being used as a surrogate of the planned occupation the week before, an after-the-fact surety that the planned occupation the preceding weekend would have been equally lawful Coupled with this, commentators have also taken every opportunity to rail against me for authorising the use of force, for denying the right to protest and for ignoring the City's poor.
I take exception to all of these charges.
First, we cannot compare apples with oranges. Cllr. Ehrenreich's event was hurriedly organised after the controversy of the failed occupation. Like many of his stunts, it cynically sought to capitalise on a divisive issue in the media and claim it for his political agenda. Like many other such attempts, it failed and largely passed by unnoticed, dismissed as unrepresentative of the people who sought to occupy the Common by many of those same people.