The Herald (South Africa)

Jobs SA’s real challenge

- Justice Malala

WHEN Nelson Mandela walked out of Victor Verster Prison on February 11 1990 something remarkable happened. In the weeks and months immediatel­y after his release hundreds of “squatter camps” (as they were called, pejorative­ly, then) mushroomed around townships and cities in South Africa.

Many of them were named Mandela Village in honour of the great man.

There wasn’t a township that didn’t have a Mandela Village or Mandela City next to it.

When that name was oversubscr­ibed Winnie Mandela settlement­s followed.

Then Chris Hani was murdered and his name appeared on new settlement­s. The phenomenon has never really stopped. After 1994, the Mandela administra­tion followed the lead of these settlement­s, installing electricit­y lines and water and sanitation for many in a race to catch up.

The settlement­s have always led though, with the government always far behind, seemingly without a plan.

There has been a great migration across our land. The poor have fled rural areas, particular­ly the former Bantustans, to seek a better life for themselves in the big cities. They want jobs. There aren’t any in the former Bophuthats­wana, or the former Venda and Ciskei and Transkei. The jobs are in Johannesbu­rg, Cape Town and other urban centres. Even then, these jobs are few and far between.

Families who were forced by apartheid laws to live in back yards in townships have been freed to move to these new settlement­s.

Many had been on housing or land waiting lists for years under apartheid.

Many waited even longer under this administra­tion.

When land settlement­s happened, they bought in. They wanted to live on a small piece of land they could call their own.

It is in this context that one should see the violent protests over settlement­s in Protea Glen in Soweto, Olievenhou­tbosch in Midrand and Hermanus in the Western Cape.

It is nothing new, either – the Gauteng province says there have been 4 419 incidents of illegal land occupation over the past two years alone.

It seems to me that successive land acts, the apartheid regime and its Bantustan and job reservatio­n policies have gifted us with a real and urgent problem – urban land hunger.

And the failure to ignite economies of these former Bantustans and rural areas has exacerbate­d the problem. More than the farmland that seems to take centre stage in recent debates, this is the heart of the problem.

In the heat and noise of politician­s’ appropriat­ion of the land debate, it was therefore interestin­g to hear Gauteng premier David Makhura announcing that his administra­tion would begin a process of rapid land release in which serviced stands would be handed over to those who would rather build for themselves as opposed to waiting in line for free housing.

Makhura said he had instructed municipali­ties to work in providing land parcels, but that those areas should be viable for bulk infrastruc­ture for developmen­t.

“Those land parcels, for human settlement­s in particular, should be provided with bulk infrastruc­ture so that there is no informalis­ation,” he told Eldorado Park residents recently.

It is a welcome move.

Yet one has to wonder why it has taken so long to reach such a realisatio­n, even when again and again many scholars have pointed out that municipali­ties, state-owned enterprise­s and other government entities hold an enormous amount of land on their books? So, what is to be done? Of course there is a debate about agricultur­al land – and it should continue.

It was interestin­g to hear Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i at the ANC land summit at the weekend talking about how the Zimbabwe land reform project was destroyed by “elite capture” (politician­s and their connected friends allocating prime farmland to themselves and their relatives).

Jacob Zuma and many of those implicated in the handing of our state-owned enterprise­s to the Gupta family were in the room.

They did not squirm or look down in shame, as they should. The urgent land question is urban. That question raises another, even more urgent challenge.

All these people in urban centres want a better life for themselves. They need jobs.

That is the real challenge, the urgent challenge. Jobs, jobs, jobs.

All these people in urban centres ...need jobs. That is the real challenge

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