It is hard not to notice the degree to which Cape Town Mayor Dan Plato reduces the complexities of the Hangberg impasse into a zero-sum conflict between good and evil (Cape Argus 30 Sept 2010; Sunday Times 03 Oct 2010).
On the one hand, a ‘criminal element' - vicious, anarchic and violent - has attacked and delayed the implementation of an impending, and idealistically described upgrade to an informal settlement.
On the other, there is the City - the arbiter of a constitutionally enshrined democratic rule of law - which has tried "every avenue" to work with the community at large in order to provide water and sanitation, electricity and even it is claimed, "green open spaces" at the foot of the Sentinel.
The destructive thread running through Plato's interpretation of Hangberg is the tendency to lay the blame of poverty on the poor, and subject communities to collective punishment. Indeed beyond Hangberg, it speaks to the broader approach that Plato as Mayor, and Helen Zille as Premier, have come to represent.
Although Plato insists that engagement with the community has been continuous and thorough, it seems that his criteria for measuring successful engagement generally is the degree to which the people come over to his point of view, not the degree to which people's voices are heard and respected. The question that seems to emerge is whether the many people who have resisted the City's plans over time were the criminals and druglords that Plato and Zille have blamed the crisis on, or if it was just easier to label them as such.
But does this not just divert attention from the more important issues at hand? Whether or not criminals were involved in this particular violent clash is a separate (and less important) question than the actual long-term crisis of poverty and settlement upgrade faced in Hangberg and elsewhere.