The Herald (South Africa)

Now more than ever NGOs doing work of government

- Therina Wentzel Therina Wentzel is the national director of the National Council of and for Persons with Disabiliti­es.

IN a troubled year, it is more important than ever that we help those who help others.

We’re halfway through 2017 and already this year will be remembered as the one when government became an incapable partner to society.

The state and its ability effectivel­y to deliver services have been torn apart by cronyism, greed and corruption.

Adding to the bad news is the fact that the economy is now in recession.

Its descent into a kind of uncaring paralysis has been carefully documented over the past few years.

The near-collapse of certain sections of the state has increased the burden on civil society groups to mediate the anger felt by a nation that has come to see itself as uncared for.

As things stand NGOs, civil society groupings and other non-state players play an enormous role in filling in the gaps where the state has no capacity or desire to care for our society’s most vulnerable citizens.

There have been stunning examples of this in this year.

In February, the horror of the death of more than 100 mental health patients was revealed.

In a move to cut costs, the state had farmed out hundreds of patients to care facilities in Gauteng that were not adequately staffed or equipped to take care of mental health patients.

In doing so it ignored warnings and the results were predictabl­y horrific: in some instances not only was there no licence to operate such homes, but there was not even enough food or water.

Patients starved to death over days in some instances.

Months after the health ombudsman gave his recommenda­tions to fix the mess, progress is still painfully slow.

This inhumane tragedy will remain a stain on the state’s track record of respecting the basic human rights of citizens placed in its care.

In March, there was great doubt cast over whether social grants would be paid at all on April 1 after corruption and incompeten­ce in the Department of Social Developmen­t and its grant-paying agency, Sassa, were unpacked once more in the Constituti­onal Court.

More than 17-million South Africans rely on the state for social grants.

The attitude of the state – which dithered so much about resolving the matter that the only workable solution was to extend a grant-paying contract that had been declared illegal by the courts – was startling and cavalier.

The uncertaint­y over the state’s ability to meet its grant obligation­s had a knock-on effect on NGOs.

Many NGOs are wholly dependent on the state for their funding.

Yet, as Robyn Wolfson Vorster notes in her report for the Daily Maverick in May, the relationsh­ip between the state, NGOs and civil society has eroded and is in many instances hostile.

The strike by social workers and its effects left beneficiar­ies stranded, unsure of how to pay their staff or their suppliers.

Those who care for at-risk children, persons with disabiliti­es and the frail were left totally exposed to potential tragedy through the loss of, or damage to, human life.

What is worse than the loss or putting at risk of human life?

What society can heal from a history of horror and hurt, when it lives with this on its conscience from day to day?

The outpouring of anger and grief over the epidemic of violence against women and children in the past month shows that South Africans are not numb, as we are so often told we are.

We do care and we need to continue to care.

We need to create agency for ourselves if we are to change our society, which allows too much of the burden of our social ills to be carried by an NGO sector that hangs by a gossamer thread.

We cannot and should not ghettoise violence against women.

We cannot sit by and let superstiti­on threaten persons with disabiliti­es and albinism.

We should not isolate our community members who are mentally ill so that when they are in crisis, no one is there to see and act.

And we must act to protect our children, who are our future.

The loss of human life as a result of a society that has forgotten how to care for all of its members is unacceptab­le.

Building an inclusive society begins when everyone is taken into account and there is a place for all in the sunshine.

It is not an accident that neglect and violence coalesce around our most vulnerable citizens.

It is well documented that children with disabiliti­es have access to fewer resources, and are neglected, abused and sexually exploited more often than other children.

This happens because no space is created for their voices or for their faces. Daily, we witness the inequity in our country. At the National Council of and for Persons with Disabiliti­es, we confront the heart-breaking – but also life-affirming – stories of South Africans of all walks of life.

Fortunatel­y, the council is not dependent on the state for funding, as all our funds are raised through our Casual Day activities.

And we are very grateful to the thousands of South Africans who participat­e and continue to support Casual Day on the first Friday every September. But other NGOs are not as lucky and they need support to carry on the vital work they do.

Now more than ever, it is up to every South African to embrace the NGOs around them and to lighten their load, by increasing their own involvemen­t in caring for those in need in their own neighbourh­oods and cities.

Our constituti­on and Bill of Rights afford us many protection­s and freedoms, but they are rendered meaningles­s until each citizen takes action to ensure that their family members, their schools, their neighbourh­oods – all of our citizens – are able to access their rights and protection­s.

 ??  ?? LONG WAIT: Grant recipients queue outside a Sassa office for their payouts
LONG WAIT: Grant recipients queue outside a Sassa office for their payouts
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