Sunday Times

State plan ‘jeopardise­s aid for poor’

Government lacks capacity to distribute food aid, NGOs say

- By ALEX PATRICK

● SA’s most vulnerable people are likely to be the biggest losers in a standoff between the government and NGOs over the distributi­on of food parcels.

Nonprofit organisati­on Solidarity Helping Hand, which distribute­s aid to thousands of families across SA, has threatened legal action “should government implement regulation­s prescribin­g that the distributi­on of food to the poor be centralise­d under government control”.

Some experts say that while centralisi­ng aid distributi­on during the lockdown has merit, it would require the social developmen­t department to dramatical­ly improve its performanc­e.

“Centralisi­ng aid does have a role but then social developmen­t needs to commit to ensuring the food actually gets to the people. They need to step it up,” said Mervyn Abrahams, programme co-ordinator at Pietermari­tzburg Economic Justice & Dignity, a group that lobbies for communitie­s in need.

Abrahams said the department needed to do away with the red tape around who would receive food aid.

“Whoever is queuing is there because they are hungry. For instance, in the Western Cape you cannot receive food aid if you have an income of R3,200 or more, but we say those households are absolutely poor.

“Our calculatio­ns are that a household of seven people needs R3,400 to survive a month — that’s just food.

“[Centralisa­tion] only works if the department gets rid of its incompeten­ce. Otherwise it’s better if civil society distribute­s food.”

Last week, the acting social developmen­t MEC for Gauteng, Panyaza Lesufi, threatened to stop organisati­ons from distributi­ng food if they failed to observe official guidelines.

These include applying for a letter of authorisat­ion and informing police before food is handed out. He said all food donations should be handed to the department for onward distributi­on to the needy.

The government has told NGOs that the department of social developmen­t should distribute all food parcels on their behalf to avoid breaches of lockdown regulation­s.

Solidarity Helping Hand CEO Hannes Noëth said the group would continue its nationwide aid programme.

“Our calls are from the hungry, not from government … NGOs need to be allowed to do their own donations, because there is just no capacity for government to do it all.”

Noëth said fear of corruption was another reason to be wary of putting state officials in charge of food aid.

This week Nonhlanhla Khoza, social developmen­t MEC for KwaZulu-Natal, acknowledg­ed the department had received complaints about food parcels being looted and about councillor­s politicisi­ng or benefiting financiall­y from aid distributi­on.

Themba Masango, chair of the #NotInMyNam­e NGO, called the government’s centralisa­tion plan “inconvenie­nt”, noting that NGOs have already been classified as essential services.

“NGOs are not doing it for votes so there is no ulterior motive but to help. We also have to be accountabl­e to our donors, they need to know where the donations are going.”

Thabiso Hlongwane, spokespers­on for the Gauteng social developmen­t department, said there was no such thing as centralise­d food distributi­on, only guidelines on how to distribute food aid.

He said there were five food banks in Gauteng where donors were encouraged to drop off parcels. The donations were all registered and none had been stolen or given to the wrong person.

Hlongwane said the regulation­s were in place to stop the spread of the virus and to ensure that donated food was fit for consumptio­n.

“We have had cases where rotten or expired food has been donated. We know people are poor and hungry but they cannot be given rotten meat,” he said, calling the Gauteng system “corruption-free”.

“We are asking that people who do give out food give us their data, otherwise we have families getting up to five parcels a day from various groups that don’t know a donation has already taken place.”

The Solidarity Fund launched by the government has already disbursed R120m to be spent on food aid for 250,000 households.

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