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Irene Grootboom (c. 1969 – 2008) was a South African housing rights activist best known for her victory before the Constitutional Court in 2000. [1] The Court found that the government had not met its obligation to provide adequate alternative housing for the residents of Kraaifontein ’s Wallacedene informal settlement .
By 2004, Wallacedene had an estimated population of 21,000 people. The housing rights activist Irene Grootboom lived in Wallacedene. [2] Grootboom and other inhabitants won a Constitutional Court ruling in 2000 which stated that they could not be evicted without being offered alternative accommodation. [3]
The respondents based their claim on two constitutional provisions: section 26 of the Constitution, which provides that everyone has the right of access to adequate housing, thereby imposing an obligation on the State to take reasonable legislative and other measures to ensure the progressive realisation of this right within its available resources; and
Nearly seven years after the season that went down in history as 2018’s Summer of Scam, propelled by the sagas of Theranos fraudster Elizabeth Holmes and faux heiress Anna Delvey, you could call ...
Hulen Mall (1977) - Two level enclosed mall in Fort Worth, Texas; The Gallery at Market East (1977) - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Reconstructed from 2016-2019 with the new name Fashion District Philadelphia; Harborplace (1980) - A downtown marketplace built on the Baltimore Steam Packet Company docks. Indoor mall closed December 31, 2021.
President-elect Donald Trump and Republican colleagues in Congress will begin trying on Wednesday to chart a path to enacting more tax cuts, border controls and fossil fuel production through a ...
Long-distance didn't last long. Hurley, who works in film directing and shooting, followed Friel back to New York a few months later. "I feel like a month in I was like, 'I don't want to lose out ...
At 477 feet (145 meters), it is Fort Worth's fifth tallest building. It has 33 floors. Its addresses are Commerce Street, East 1st street, East 2nd Street, and Main Street. It was completed in 1982. It was the tallest building in Fort Worth from 1982 until 1983 when the Burnett Plaza was completed. It is the shorter of the two towers in the ...