There is also a branch of the Unemployed People's Movement in
Grahamstown in the
Eastern Cape. It argues for a bottom up system of democracy. Along with the struggle for employment, housing and electricity women's issues, including the demand for toilets and campaigns against rape, have emerged as key issues in Grahamstown. The movement has had some success in campaigning against corruption in Grahamstown. The movement has also opposed xenophobia. Its current chairperson is
Ayanda Kota and the Grahamstown branch works closely with radical students. According to commentator
Mazibuko Jara, "it has become the most powerful force in the Makana municipality. Its formation represented a collective recognition of the appetite for self-emancipation, and without self-organisation, the unemployed in Grahamstown might as well have remained on the margins of that divided small town. In its short two years of existence, the movement has marched, written deputations, submitted memorandums of demands, held sit-ins, held meetings with the state, used the law and more. It has challenged unemployment, poor-quality housing, lack of housing, lack of water and sanitation, lack of electricity and street lighting, violence against women and problems with the social security system. The movement has humanised politics by concerning themselves with how to rebuild the social fabric of a poor community." ==Repression==