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Amazon’s new South African HQ gets the go-ahead

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The City of Cape Town has given the green light for the construction of a new mega-development housing Amazon Inc’s new Africa base in the heart of Cape Town’s emerging tech hub.

Amazon will be the main tenant in the $280m (R4bn) River Club project that will also house residential units, office space, restaurants and a 200-room hotel.

The municipality granted approval for the sprawling multiplex to be built across 15 hectares of land over three to five years on Sunday.

“US retail giant, Amazon, will be the anchor tenant, opening a base of operations on the African continent,” it said in a statement.

The project will create around 19, 500 jobs, it added.

Artist’s impression of the River Club development. Photo Credit: The River Club

The announcement sparked outcry from environmental and civil society groups, who say the project ransacks the local ecosystem and dishonours a sacred heritage site of the indigenous Khoi people, who settled on the land when they were driven from another area by Dutch settlers. 

The development will also block the valley, aggravating flooding, climate change and drought, environmentalists say.

A local civil society group, The Observatory Civic Association (OCA), launched a fund-raising appeal on social media to take the project developers, the Liesbeek Leisure Properties Trust, to the high court, continuing five-year legal battle against the firm.

“The money raised will enable a fair process in which the indigenous Khoi people who oppose the destruction of sacred land will be able to have their say about what kind of development happens on the land,” the OCA said.

Defending the move, the City of Cape Town insisted the project was “sustainable” and “balances ecological conservation and urban development.”

The project will include an indigenous garden, cultural, heritage and media centre for the Khoi people, a “heritage-eco trail” and garden amphitheatre that members of the displaced community can use.

Amazon will reportedly move its base from its modern eight-story office building in the city’s Roeland Street to the larger venue.

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