A City Held Hostage: Johannesburg – BBC Africa Eye Documentary

A City Held Hostage: Johannesburg – BBC Africa Eye Documentary



#BBCAfricaEye investigates Johannesburg’s hijacked buildings, before the city’s G20 summit.

Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽

In November 2025, Johannesburg will host a G20 summit for the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies. This will be the first time that a G20 meeting will be held on African soil.

The world’s attention will be on Johannesburg, but is the city ready?

Africa Eye reporter Ayanda Charlie investigates the inner city’s abandoned and derelict buildings, where many people live in conditions unfit for human habitation. After decades of decay and neglect, many of these buildings lack electricity, water or basic sanitation with open sewers a common sight.

Worse still, some buildings are hijacked by criminals who take control and collect rent for themselves, turning them into havens for illicit activity,.

The BBC has been able to identify the location of 102 of these abandoned and derelict buildings, but some reports say there are up to 700, in an area of only a few square miles.

South Africa’s President, Cyril Ramaphosa, has spoken of the need to “turn around those abandoned buildings and take Johannesburg back to its glory days” but the scale of the challenge is enormous, leading many people to think his words are nothing more than a hollow appeal.

00:00 The President’s Call to Action
03:00 A hijacked building
07:15 How did Johannesburg get so bad?
07:57 The Sheriff
09:45 Temporary accommodation that lasts 17 years
12:06 Meeting an ex-hijacker
16:45 The City Council responds
18:18 Illegal evictions and Operation Dudula
19:09 Meeting anti-eviction lawyers at SERI
20:28 Building at a stalemate
22:37 A legal eviction

📽️ You may also be interested in watching these documentaries:

🎥 Check out all Africa Eye investigations here:

🎞️ Watch more investigative journalism from our award-winning #BBCEye investigations team at this documentary playlist:

***
Subscribe:
Website:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:

#SouthAfrica #Documentary #Johannesburg #G20 #Joburg #Hijacked #InvestigativeJournalism

38 thoughts on “A City Held Hostage: Johannesburg – BBC Africa Eye Documentary

  1. I think if the dwellers just tried to practice stringent hygiene measures. They would be in a better environment. You can't just go defecating everywhere upto your doorstep and expect the city council to keep you tidy.

  2. It’s hardly surprising they’ve messed up what the Boers gave them. Same in the other neighbouring countries. Before the Portuguese arrived they never even had the wheel or had reached Madagascar.

  3. Wait so by the BBC's standards and rhetoric they must denounce all these black people who are holding up signs "deport illegal migrants" as racist and far-right yea? Because that seems to be your consistent tactic back home when any English person waves their own flag and shows an ounce of care for their own country.

    Dear South Africans, politicians are the scum of the earth, they will tell you every lie to keep power, while fuelling their own greed and lavish lifestyle of the back of you

    The BBC are the state progandists of Britain, they are cut from the same cloth as the politicians. Protectors of pedophiles, the chauffer's to Jimmy Savile

  4. 😂 what did Zimbabwe before they used candle light? ….. electricity.

    This will happen in SA soon.

    Some cultures just have no sense of personal responsibility. No sense of work ethic. No sense of doing what’s right. No pride. No sense of maintenance or upkeep. No ability to look to the future and plan for it. No sense of doing well for next generations of your people. I hope it’s an IQ situation cuz if it isn’t low IQ it’s gotta be moral bankruptcy.

Leave a Reply to @chrishulse1188 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *