Sunday Times

Provinces give Sisulu a cold shoulder

Minister’s grand plan to relocate thousands gets chilly reception

- By APHIWE DEKLERK and GRAEME HOSKEN

● Some provincial government­s are opposing human settlement­s minister Lindiwe Sisulu’s plan to move tens of thousands of people from crowded settlement­s.

Planning and housing experts also warned that money for the moves should be used rather to improve hygiene, and access to water and food.

Sisulu’s spokespers­on, McIntosh Polela, said she was talking to civic organisati­ons in the hope of getting communitie­s to agree before presenting her plans to the cabinet.

“She will be working with other government entities, including municipali­ties, once there is an agreement with the communitie­s.” He said the minister was aware that people in these communitie­s “always resisted” being moved. Discussion­s are being facilitate­d by nongovernm­ental organisati­ons.

“As for the budget, this is a constantly moving target and one cannot put a price on human lives,” he said.

Sisulu has ordered the urgent move of selected communitie­s in Gauteng, the Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

The plan’s details have been left to provincial and local government­s. Little is known about how communitie­s have been selected, whether households and families will be split up, how properties will be protected or, once the virus has been contained, if people can to return to their homes.

The plan targeted 29 settlement­s, five of which are priorities: Stjwetla in Alexandra, Johannesbu­rg, Kennedy Road in Durban, Mooiplaats in Pretoria, Duncan Village in East London and Dunoon in Cape Town.

KwaZulu-Natal human settlement­s MEC Peggy Nkonyeni said her department was not planning to move anyone from Kennedy Road. “We will be following our programme [of upgrading informal settlement­s],” she said.

“We have a number of transition camps in KZN. We are very, very much scared [of] establishi­ng other transit camps now because many people have been staying there for more than 10 years and if you ask me how their living conditions are … they are very, very bad. We cannot continue promoting establishm­ent of transit camps in KZN. We are in a process of reducing them and we even agreed that we will demolish them.”

In the Eastern Cape, a highly placed official said there were no immediate plans to move households from Duncan Village. He said although the provincial government had identified empty land in East London and Port Elizabeth for possible resettleme­nt, this would be done only if a suspected case of Covid-19 was reported.

“You cannot just move to announce that you are moving people because you would be creating panic,” he said.

In Gauteng, insiders said Sisulu had not consulted human settlement­s MEC Lebogang Maile about her plans.

Western Cape human settlement­s MEC Tertius Simmers said that in the absence of a plan from the national government, the province and Cape Town planned a “rapid informal settlement­s support upgrade”.

The plan would target two settlement­s identified by Sisulu; Kosovo, near Philippi on the Cape Flats, and Dunoon, near Table View on the west coast. There is an estimated budget of about R553m for the whole project.

Simmers said the province had not yet been allocated a budget by Sisulu, nor been given targets and timelines for the project.

He said the national government should align its plan with the realities because a large number of people living in the settlement­s did not qualify for the department’s housing programme.

Professor Philip Harrison, the South African research chair in spatial analysis and city planning based at Wits University, said people could not be ripped from their homes. “A plan like this won’t be achieved within a month. By the time you get a major relocation and de-densificat­ion programme off the ground, the country will already be devastated.”

He said the government should put its efforts into improving sanitation, food security, monitoring and testing, and isolation and quarantine strategies. Removals would cause “conflict which we can ill afford”.

South African Cities Network researcher Siphelele Ngobese said though global medical evidence on Covid-19’s spread had forced city authoritie­s to think about de-densificat­ion, it had to be carefully balanced to ensure people’s rights to housing and employment.

“The department must show how people’s rights will be guaranteed, when they can return home, how their properties will be safeguarde­d and how their economic livelihood­s will be secured if they cannot return home.”

Professor Marie Huchzermey­er, of the Centre for Urbanism and Built Environmen­t Studies at the Wits School of Architectu­re and Planning, said de-densificat­ion came with enormous costs. “It not only isolates households, but also separates homes from livelihood­s, and breaks social ties, which are the very basis of what makes informal settlement­s work as a survival base for the unemployed and poorly paid workers.” reporting by Zingisa Mvumvu

 ??  ?? Lindiwe Sisulu, whose plans to move settlement­s have met with resistance.
Lindiwe Sisulu, whose plans to move settlement­s have met with resistance.

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