• 76 lives lost in Marshalltown fire, survivors left displaced and traumatised. 
  • Commission of Inquiry findings remain unreleased two years later. 
  • Lawyers for Human Rights demand truth, accountability, and urgent reform. 

On the night of 31 August 2023, the Usindiso Building in Marshalltown, Johannesburg, was engulfed in flames. Within hours, 76 lives were lost. Dozens more were injured, displaced, and left to navigate trauma without support.  

The building, once a refuge for those failed by the housing system, became a tomb. Two years later, the silence from those entrusted with justice is louder than ever. 

This was no freak accident. It was the foreseeable result of a system that criminalises poverty, neglects urban safety, and treats vulnerable lives as disposable. Like many others across South Africa’s urban centres, the Usindiso Building was overcrowded, unsafe, and ignored by authorities until tragedy forced the world to look. 

In the aftermath, officials scrambled to deflect blame. A Commission of Inquiry was swiftly announced, accompanied by solemn promises of truth and accountability. But two years on, its findings remain hidden. Survivors have received no restitution. Families of the deceased have been offered condolences without justice. And the broader public is left with unanswered questions and a growing sense of betrayal. 

A damning indictment 

Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR), in a statement, condemned the state’s inertia and the broader failure of governance. “Two years without justice, two years without accountability,” the statement declared. It is not merely a slogan, it is a searing indictment of a government that has failed to act, failed to protect, and failed to reform. 

The Usindiso Fire is emblematic of a deeper crisis. South Africa’s housing policies remain mired in bureaucracy, exclusion, and neglect. Informal dwellings and hijacked buildings are not anomalies; they are the inevitable outcome of a system that refuses to prioritise safe, affordable housing. When the state fails to provide, people improvise. And when disaster follows, it is the survivors who are blamed for trying to live. 

A call that cannot wait 

LHR’s statement calls for the release of the Commission’s findings, the prosecution of those responsible, and sweeping reforms in housing and urban safety. Survivors must be compensated, rehoused, and supported. Families of the dead must be given truth alongside dignity. Above all, the government must confront the uncomfortable reality that South Africa’s housing crisis is not only a logistical failure but a moral one. 

As LHR attorney Thato Mokoena stated in closing: “We cannot allow the memory of the Usindiso 76 to be buried beneath bureaucratic delay and political indifference. Justice delayed is not just justice denied; it is justice erased.” 

Conviction.co.za 

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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