21 Aug, 2019
By, Wikipedia
Strandfontein, Cape Town
It was laid out in 1962. The name is Afrikaans for ‘beach fountain’.
9 miles Surfing Club
During the Apartheid, only white surfers were allowed to use Muizenberg beach, the colored surfers were chased off the beach. They then had to walk nine miles from there to Strandfontein Pavilion where they could enjoy surfing and where they started the 9 Miles Surfing Club Project.
Homeless camp during COVID-19 Lockdown
The beach town is best known as the location of the camp where the City of Cape Town interned homeless people for over a month during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown. It has been controversial because of claims that the City forced people into these camps and because of the lack of physical distancing and the failure of the camp to address the basic needs of people held at the camp. Its existence has also been heavily criticised by independent monitors linked to the South African Human Rights Commission.
References
- ^ "Sub Place Strandfontein". Census 2011.
- ^ "Dictionary of Southern African Place Names (Public Domain)". Human Science Research Council. p. 419.
- ^ "Strandfontein homeless site more a prison than a place of safety — Human rights report". Retrieved 17 May 2020.
- ^ "Blindness: How the Strandfontein camp was set up to fail". Retrieved 17 May 2020.
- ^ "Independent Report submitted to the South African Human Rights Commission concerning the City of Cape Town's COVID-19 Shelter For Street-based People — Strandfontein, Cape Town" (PDF). Retrieved 17 May 2020.