Nompumelelo Tshabalala, 41, emerges from her dwarf ‘shack’ made up of
rusty metal sheets and falls short of bumping into this reporter as she
bends down to avoid knocking her head against the top part of her
makeshift door frame.
“This has been
my home for the past 16 years and I have lived here with my husband
until his death in 2008 and now with my four children still in this
two-roomed shack,” she told IPS.
Tshabalala lives in Diepkloof
township in Johannesburg, South Africa, in a densely populated informal
settlement – a euphemism for slums, where an estimated 15 million of the
country’s approximately 52 million people live, according to
UN-Habitat, the U.N. agency for human settlements.
Neighbouring
Zimbabwe has an estimated 835,000 people living in informal settlements,
according to Homeless International, a British non-governmental
organisation focusing on urban poverty issues.
"Slum-dwelling here in Africa has become normal, a trend to live with,
which is difficult to combat owing to numerous factors ranging from
political corruption to economic inequalities necessitated by the
growing gap between the rich and the poor,” Gilbert Nyaningwe, an
independent development expert from Zimbabwe, told IPS.
Overall, out of an estimated population of 1.1 billion people, Africa has more than 570 million slum-dwellers, reports
UN-Habitat, with over half of the urban population (61.7 percent)
living in slums. Worldwide, notes the U.N. agency, the number of
slum-dwellers now stands at 863 million and is set to shoot up to 889
million by 2020.
Development agencies in Africa say slum-dwelling
remains a continental trend despite the U.N. Millennium Development
Goals targets compelling all countries globally to achieve a significant
improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers by 2020.
According
to the United Nations, that 100 million target “was met well in advance
of the 2020 deadline”, and in African countries such as Egypt, Libya
and Morocco the total number of urban slum dwellers has almost been
halved, Tunisia has eradicated them completely, and Ghana, Senegal and
Uganda have made steady progress, reducing their slum populations by up
to 20 percent.
However, sub-Saharan Africa continues to have the highest rate of
“slum incidence” of any major world region, with millions of people
living in settlements characterised by some combination of overcrowding,
tenuous dwelling structures, and poor or no access to adequate water
and sanitation facilities.
Hector Mutharika, a retired economist
in late Malawian President Kamuzu Banda’s government, blamed poor
service delivery for the increase in slums in Africa. “The
increasing numbers of slum dwellers in Africa is due to poor service
delivery here by local authorities which more often than not worry most
about filling their pockets from local authorities’ coffers instead of
channelling proper housing facilities to poor people, which then pushes
homeless individuals into building slum settlements anywhere,” Mutharika
told IPS.
For Rwandan civil society activist Otapiya Gundurama,
the roots of the problem go far back in time. “Shanty homes in Africa
are a result of the continent’s urban infrastructure set up during
colonial rule at which time housing and economic diversification were
limited, with everything related to urban governance centralised, while
towns and cities were established to enhance the lifestyles and
interests of a minority,” Gundurama told IPS.
Some opposition politicians in Africa, like Gilbert Dzikiti,
president of Zimbabwe’s opposition Democratic Assembly for Restoration
and Empowerment (DARE), see the trend of growing slums here as a result
of government failure. “The perpetual rise of slum settlements in Africa
testifies to persistent failure by governments here to invest in both
rural and urban development,” Dzikiti told IPS.
African civil
society leaders blame rising unemployment on the continent for the
continuing rise in the number of slums. “Be it in cities or remote
areas, slums in Africa are a result of huge numbers of jobless people
who hardly have the means to upgrade their own dwellings,” Precious
Shumba, director of the Harare Residents Trust in Zimbabwe, told IPS.
In
order to reverse the trend of growing slums across the continent,
Shumba said, “local authorities in African countries should strike a
balance in developing both rural and urban areas, creating employment so
that people stop flocking to cities in huge numbers in search of jobs.”
African
slum-dwellers like South Africa’s Tshabalala accuse city authorities of
ignoring the mushrooming of informal settlements for selfish reasons.
“Slums
here are sources of cheap labour that keeps the wheels of industry
turning, which is why local authorities are not concerned about our
living standards because they [local authorities] are getting more and
more revenue from firms thriving on our sweat,” Tshabalala told IPS.
Meanwhile,
rising slum settlements in Africa are also having a knock-on effect for
other development goals in the education and health sectors for
example.
“The United Nations Millennium Development Goal of
universal attainment of primary education for all by the end of this
year is certainly set to be missed by a number of countries here in
Africa, especially as many of these sprouting slum settlements have no
schools to help the children growing in the communities get any
education,” a senior official in Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Primary and
Secondary Education told IPS on the condition of anonymity for
professional reasons.
At the same time, “there are often no
toilets, no water and no clinics in most slum-dwelling areas here,
exposing people to diseases, consequently derailing the MDG of halting
the spread of HIV/AIDS and other diseases in informal settlements,” Owen
Dliwayo of the Youth Dialogue Action Network, a lobby group in
Zimbabwe, told IPS.
from here
Commentary and analysis to persuade people to become socialist and to act for themselves, organizing democratically and without leaders, to bring about a world of common ownership and free access. We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for socialism. We are not reformists with a programme of policies to patch up capitalism.
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