Category Archives: IPS

Xenophobia Still Smouldering

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Xenophobia Still Smouldering

CAPE TOWN, Jun 19 (IPS) – “My worry is that my children are going to be slaves because they won’t have anything. These foreign people come to South Africa with nothing, but tomorrow he has cash, third day he owns a shop and fourth day he has a car. Where do these foreign people get this money?”

Small business owners are venting their frustrations on ‘foreign nationals’ – among them many Somalis – who own shops in the country’s townships, causing experts to warn that xenophobic violence could increase.

Businesspeople from four of Cape Town’s impoverished communities – Delft, Masiphumelele, Samora Machel and Gugulethu – held several meetings in late May and early June to discuss ways of ridding their communities of foreign-owned shops.

The meetings echo those held a year ago in the Gauteng townships of Atteridgville and Alexandra, shortly before over 150,000 foreign nationals were displaced by a wave of xenophobic violence that swept the country, killing 62 people with thousands more beaten or raped.

On Jun. 14 this year, an unidentified man delivered letters to all ‘Somali’ shops in Gugulethu, giving the shopkeepers until Jun. 20 to leave the area.

The handwritten, photocopied letters purported to come from the Gugulethu Business Forum, and even though some members distanced themselves from the letters, others accused Somali shopkeepers of having a deliberate agenda to ‘kill off’ local business.

“Somalians want to be the cheapest business people in town. If they see that am also pricing my goods like them they are going to find ways to undercut me,” said one woman shopkeeper who declined to be named for this story.

“At the end of the day there is going to be a lot of trouble in my township. If I had money I would have left long time ago because there is no peace here. And those boys from Somalia have come and created more troubles,” said another, who identified himself only as ‘Boyce’.

Add the plans to remove ‘Somali shopkeepers’ to the steady number of attacks and murders of ‘foreign nationals’ and the mix becomes deadly, says Loren Landau, director of the University of the Witwatersrand’s Forced Migration Studies unit.

“Violence against foreigners is rapidly becoming fully integrated into the standard politics of some townships,” says Landau.

In May 2008, over 150,000 foreign nationals were displaced by a wave of xenophobic violence that swept the country, with thousands being murdered or raped.

But since the “officially recognised” outbreak of xenophobia ended last June, police have not kept official statistics of xenophobia-related murders, claiming instead that any deaths of foreign nationals are the result of South Africa’s generally high crime rate.

This itself has fuelled xenophobia, says the Somali Association of South Africa.

“There is a culture of impunity developing. When Somali traders are murdered the police don’t act on it. There is a perception that if people kill or do whatever to Somalis, nothing will happen to them,” says the Somali Association of South Africa’s Western Cape co-ordinator Hussein Omar.

Omar’s fears appear to be borne out by recent events – in the last fortnight, two young Somali shop assistants were burnt to death, one Zimbabwean and one national of Bangladesh murdered, three shop assistants injured with gunshot wounds in Delft, and another ‘Somali shop’ in the Cape Town suburb Khayelitsha set alight.

Omar is investigating the deaths of the Somali shop assistants – Omar Josef and Hazim Amad, who died when their shop – where they sleep – was set ablaze at two a.m.

The local police told IPS they have already ruled out xenophobia even though the investigation is still under way. Somali residents in the community say the shop was doused with petrol before being set alight but the investigator, Detective Constable Eldoret van der Merwe, would only say “at this stage we can’t say how the fire started”.

In Gugulethu, a local activist group – the Gugulethu Anti-Eviction Campaign – tried for three weeks to convince the Gugulethu Business Forum not to vent their anger on Somali shopkeepers, but instead to ask government why it was not doing more to support small business.

But the Gugulethu Anti-Eviction Campaign’s Mncedisi Twalo says after the businesspeople delivered the threatening letters to ‘Somali’ shops, he was forced to ask the police for a guarantee that they would protect the Somali shopkeepers.

The police have since arranged meetings between local businesspeople and the Somali shopkeepers, which they have closed to the media.

Omar fears that the actions of small groups of local businesspeople could become a catalyst for other people to vent their frustrations on ‘foreign nationals’.

And Landau says that as people come to accept that it is legitimate to plot against “foreign” business people, “the violence will only spread”.

Report Details Toll Taken by Lack of Water, Sanitation

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Report Details Toll Taken by Lack of Water, Sanitation
Moyiga Nduru

JOHANNESBURG, Nov 9 (IPS) – The 2006 Human Development Report, ‘Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis’, focuses on the ongoing problems that surround provision of potable water and sanitation. The document is being launched Thursday in Cape Town, South Africa, by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Global figures presented by the report’s authors are depressing: currently, more than a billion people are denied the right to clean water, while 2.6 billion do not have adequate sanitation.

“Each year 1.8 million children die from diarrhoea that could be prevented with access to clean water and a toilet; 443 million school days are lost to water-related illnesses; and almost 50 percent of all people in developing countries are suffering at any given time from a health problem caused by a lack of water and sanitation,” the document notes.

“To add to these human costs, the crisis in water and sanitation holds back economic growth, with sub-Saharan Africa losing five percent of gross domestic product annually — far more than the region receives in aid,” it adds.

Some have already voiced doubts about whether the study will make a difference in the lives of the poor.

“Most of the reports, like the one being launched by the UNDP this week, are done at the higher level. Those who write them don’t have a clue about how the poor suffer from water shortages,” said S’bu Zikode, president of the Shack Dwellers Movement, based in the South African coastal city of Durban.

It was dark when Zikode spoke to IPS, but he could still see a hive of activity around a water collection point nearby. “There are about 20 people lining up to collect water in an open place right here, now,” he said. “And it’s already late. It’s about eight p.m. (18.00 GMT).”

“These people don’t have the chance to collect water in the morning when the queue is long. They go to work and return late in the evening. They need water for cooking, washing, bathing and drinking.”

Zikode and his neighbours are poor. They came to the city in search of greener pastures and live in Kenneby, an informal settlement five km from Durban. “About 7,000 people live here. They share five water-stand pipes (and) six toilets,” he said.

In nearby Foreman, an informal settlement seven km from Durban, 8,000 people make do with two water-stand pipes and two sets of latrines for men and women respectively, added Zikode.

Durban, with a population of three million, has more than 180,000 shack dwellers in dire need of water, according to Desmond D’sa, head of the South Durban Community Environmental Alliance, a non-governmental organisation.

“People queue up for water from five o’clock (03.00 GMT) in the morning, some the whole day,” he told IPS. “And the queues are long.”

“Water is a big problem in the informal settlements, and so is sanitation. People are losing their dignity by depositing faeces everywhere. It’s unhygienic. The stench and the diseases that go with it are worrying,” Zikode added.

Since October, he said, 18 people — including eight from one family — had died after their shacks caught fire: “There’s no water to put out the fire. Fire brigades take hours, and by the time they arrived you would have lost your property or even your life.”

Yet, “Just across the road from the shacks we live in is a mansion owned by a family of seven. The family has seven running water taps and three toilets. You just look at the imbalance of the society. It’s unacceptable. Life is so unfair.”

Such glaring inequalities are whipping up bitterness. “We fought together during apartheid. We all contributed to the freedom that South Africa is enjoying today. Unfortunately the majority of our people have been forgotten. Our voices have been ignored around the issues of water and sanitation,” Zikode complained.

But during a budget speech delivered before parliament in March, Finance Minister Trevor Manuel said water supply infrastructure now reaches about 90 percent of South Africa’s population.

The Department of Provincial and Local Government says 165 water service firms currently provide 3.9 million households with free water.

“In South Africa every citizen has a right to water. This is enshrined in the constitution. And water is a hotly debated issue in South Africa. This is what it should be,” Kevin Watkins, lead author of the 2006 Human Development Report, told journalists in South Africa’s commercial hub of Johannesburg, Tuesday.

The report lauded South Africa’s water policy. “South Africa has already legislated that every person should have a minimum of 25 litres of clean water each day.” However, it noted that challenges remained with “informal settlements…not connected to the utility or where households do not have metres installed.”

Zikode said people used to buy 25 litres of water for 30 cents until 2000. “Now we don’t pay for water. Our problem is how to overcome the lack of water and the long queues,” he observed.

But, Orlene Naidoo — chairperson of the Durban-based Westcliff Flat Residents Association — believes the water allocation is just too small. The association is a community funded-organisation which helps the poor gain access to water and electricity.

“You can’t expect a family of eight, for example, to live on 200 litres of water a day. This is not good enough. The system is cruel. Brutal,” she told IPS.

“If you have arrears they cut off your water. If you don’t have an income how do you clear the arrears?”

“We have not heard about the report,” Naidoo said, in reference to the 2006 Human Development Report. As IPS spelled out the internet link where she could download the document, she added: “The poor don’t have access to the internet. They have no e-mail. They can’t access the report.” (END/2006)