Government was committed to providing homes for all who needed them,
and jumping housing queues would not solve anything, Housing Minister
Lindiwe Sisulu said on Thursday.
She was speaking at the ceremonial handover of a batch of 1000 N2
Gateway project homes at Delft Symphony in Cape Town.
The houses hit the headlines when they were invaded by backyard
dwellers in December last year.
Some were damaged before the illegal occupants were evicted, and
have now been repaired.
They were built to house backyard dwellers on a waiting list and
residents of the overcrowded Joe Slovo squatter settlement.
Sisulu said housing delivery depended on all citizens being
responsible and not jumping queues.
"We will give a house to all who are eligible... please co-operate
with us," she said.
A total of 11 000 homes are being built in the Delft area, of which
9000 are free, government-subsidised "breaking new ground" (BNG) units,
and the rest low-cost bonded houses being built in conjunction with
banks.
The BNG homes are at least 40 square metres in area, and have a full
bathroom, kitchen and two bedrooms.
Sisulu warned beneficiaries that the government would act against
those who sold their houses before the expiry of the statutory
eight-year period.