The Herald (South Africa)

ANC uplifted conditions in townships and northern areas

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ED Gutsche’s letters are always interestin­g and provocativ­e, and his of December 7 (“Focus on rebuilding our metro together”) is no exception. I counted three insults and five factorial errors in his note – but it is Christmas season and I will ignore them – and instead I would like to comment on his two substantiv­e points:

● “The ANC should admit it ran the city into the ground.”

Gutsche writes his letter in an office with electricit­y, water, sanitation, refuse collection, tarred road access, a library and town hall up the road, beaches, parks nearby, etc. All adequate but not perfect.

Maybe he should shake his memory as to what a municipali­ty that has been “run into the ground” really looks like: when the ANC took Port Elizabeth and Uitenhage over in 1994, municipal operationa­l spending on “white” Port Elizabeth had been more than 10 times per capita what it had been in Ibhayi, Motherwell and Kwa-Nobuhle. And it showed.

A World Bank study (in 1993) of the state of municipal services in the coloured and black areas of the metro revealed that three out of four coloured and African households did not have adequate access to electricit­y in their homes, one quarter had inadequate sewerage provision and one eighth lacked adequate water provision. Three quarters of roads were gravel in the townships.

White, coloured and Asian Port Elizabeth in 1994 had 300 parks with playground equipment, 380 grassed parks, 14 swimming pools and 68 municipal sports facilities (the figures for black Port Elizabeth were 13, five, nought and six respective­ly). Motherwell, with more than 100 000 citizens, did not have a library.

ANC local government changed all of that. Electricit­y and water are now universall­y available, as are libraries, parks, sports facilities and, in fact, most municipal services.

More than 60 000 RDP houses have been built. The ANC council totally changed the environmen­t poor people live in, while disrupting services to the “serviced city” as little as possible.

Was the DA a reliable partner in all of this? Often not. An example is the motion to build a variety of community facilities (the Raymond Mhlaba Centre in Motherwell, the Red Location Cultural Complex, the George Botha Centre in Chatty, the Lillian Ngoyi Centre in Kwa-Nobuhle, the Van der Kemp’s Kloof de- velopment and others).

Not only did the DA not support this motion, it called for a division so that their names could be clearly recorded dissenting from the decision;

● “Mr Riordan and the rest of your ‘lot’ should . . . refocus on building bridges and rebuilding this city.”

As opposition in Nelson Mandela Bay, the ANC can only join metro programmes on invitation now.

We are willing partners in developing our metro. We’ll be there when asked.

Rory Riordan, ANC councillor, Port Elizabeth

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