This is an archive of the Treatment Action Campaign's public documents from
December 1998 until October 2008. I created this website because the TAC's
website appears unmaintained and people were concerned that it
was becoming
increasingly hard to find important documents.
The menu items have
been slightly edited and a new stylesheet applied to the site. But none of the
documents have been edited, not even for minor errors. The text appears on this
site as obtained from the Internet Archive.
The period covered by
the archive encompassed the campaign for HIV medicines, the civil disobedience
campaigns, the Competition Commission complaints, the 2008 xenophobic violence
and the PMTCT, Khayelitsha health workers and Matthias Rath court cases.
This section is a selection of pictures and links to civil society volunteer web-based photo albums, which show different aspects of the xenophobia crisis.
Weekend Storms
Bluewaters 2 (31 August 2008) - from Tracey Saunders
This section details TAC's attempts to overcome the information vaccuum that existed in the camps and community sites. This is our effort to relay information to displaced people about the political, legal and other developments relating to the xenophobic crisis. The newsletters were each designed with content input from civil society stakeholders as well as refugee leadership about what information is needed and wanted within their sites.
Newsletter #5 (18 August 2008)
TAC Press Statements
3 September 2008 - Statement about weekend storms and poor planning of consolidation
6 August 2008 - TAC Responds to City eviction notice and camp mismanagement
4 August 2008 - Cessation of TAC humanitarian aid relief to displaced people, court case and picket update
22 July 2008 - Press statement from Joint Refugee Leadership Committee re Home Affairs, camp conditions, education, protest timetable
Press Statements
6 August 2008 - TAC Responds to City eviction notice and camp mismanagement
4 August 2008 - Cessation of TAC humanitarian aid relief to displaced people, court case and picket update
22 July 2008 - Press statement from Joint Refugee Leadership Committee re Home Affairs, camp conditions, education, protest timetable
10 July 2008 - Joint Civil Society press release on site conditions, denial of access, registration process, humanitarian aid, and other general issues
This letter, written on behalf of the education sub-committtee, requests a meeting to discuss the outstanding education issues with the newly appointed MEC for Education, Yousef Gabru. Included in this letter is the Joint Refugee Leadership Committee's memorandum to the previous MEC as well as the response to them.
Response Document from Department of Education (24 July 2008)
This document was discussed and given to the Joint Refugee Leadership during a meeting with the MEC for Education, Cameron Dugmore, in which they presented their memorandum (see below). This document contains a summary of the events of the meeting as well as the Department's plan for displaced learners access to education.
TAC has launched a court action on behalf of people who have displaced by xenophobic violence. Papers for Hirsi and TAC v Provincial Government, City of Cape Town and Government of RSA were filed on Tuesday, 29 July 2008 in the High Court of South Africa, Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division. The court case seeks to address conditions in camps and safety sites housing displaced people in the Western Cape.
Govenment has stated that humanitarian aid will end on the 3rd September 2008. 5000 people remain displaced in consistently poor conditions.
TAC Memorandum to the Department of Home Affairs (17 July 2008)
This letter was sent in order to obtain clarification about the "registration process" started by the Government at Youngsfield on 8 July. It expresses concerns about the process, including the lack of communication of the process to displaced people, allowing people who missed the "registration process" at their site to register, the goals and uses for the registration, the uses of the issued temporary cards and the consequences for those not able to register during the allotted timeframe.
HIRSI AND ANOTHER v PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT OF THE PROVINCE OF THE WESTERN CAPE AND OTHERS
It is now more than two months since the xenophobic violence occurred, government has failed to remedy the situation and conditions of people at camps and in halls despite being fully aware of the worsening problem. Despite at least thirty official letters, six memoranda, many requests for information, over two hundred pleas for humanitarian and other assistance and extensive meetings with representatives of City and Provincial Government as well as many peaceful, non-violent protests and demonstrations, no meaningful change has taken place in the material conditions of people living in the camps and other safety sites; indeed the conditions have become worse. While everything possible was done to avoid legal action, there now remains no choice but to ask for a court order for minimum international norms and standards on living conditions to be met at the camps and halls.
Court Documents