Development Talk

Now that South Africa has proven that it can present a world class Cup and Closing Ceremony, what will it tackle next? Photo: AFP - Monirul Bhuiyan

Now that South Africa has proven that it can present a world class Cup and Closing Ceremony, what will it tackle next? Photo: AFP - Monirul Bhuiyan

The final match of the 2010 FIFA World Cup was played last night and Spain walked away with the cup. Now that the World Cup has come to an end, newspapers are already starting to ask “What next for South Africa?” How can we harness the positive energy generated during the past month to achieve much needed development objectives for the country?

IOL.co.za reports that “rarely can a global event have generated so much advance pessimism as the World Cup”, but South Africa has silenced all its critics by hosting a successful tournament. The closing ceremony held at Soccer City in Johannesburg last night was especially spectacular and of a world class standard. Images were projected onto the field, Shakira sang Waka Waka and hundreds of dancers demonstrated various South African dances.

Keep on Feeling it

Will the closing ceremony mean the end of the positive vibe in South Africa? Photo: www.shine2010.co.za via Flickr

Will the closing ceremony mean the end of the positive vibe in South Africa? Photo: www.shine2010.co.za via Flickr

“Feel it!” was the catch phrase of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Ray Hartley writes “We felt ‘it’. Now let’s define and bottle ‘it’” in the Sunday Times. According to him everyone felt a certain emotion when Bafana Bafana sang the national anthem before the kick-off of this cup. And we kept feeling that emotion as South Africa showed that they could host a mega sports event.

Hartley says this “it” can probably be defined as patriotism. “True patriotism is very different to nationalism. It is closer to the notion of civic duty, the desire to do something to make your country a better place and to celebrate others who make the same effort.”

He says we should now find new outlets for this patriotism. “In this scenario, we would treat our major civic challenges – such as the delivery of houses, health, safety and education – in the same way we treated the World Cup.”

But our patriotism should not turn us into a “nation of spin doctors” that do not want to give criticism where it is due. After all, criticism can help you to recognise your weaknesses and improve on them.

Patriotism should also not turn into an ugly nationalism involving xenophobia, David Smith writes in the Mail & Guardian.

Olympic Games?

Should South Africa bid to host the Olympics? Image: Patrick Hoesley via Flickr

Should South Africa bid to host the Olympics? Image: Patrick Hoesley via Flickr

Some have suggested that South Africa bidding to host the Olympic Games next would be a way to keep the “high” produced by the World Cup going. But Danny Jordaan, chief organiser of the Soccer World Cup is quoted in the Mail & Guardian as saying:  “There is a sense of pride and achievement. We’ll have to see how we will ensure that pride is not the pride of 90 minutes in a World Cup but a permanent feature. Some people say find it in the hosting of the Olympics, find it another big event. I think we must find it in addressing some of the issues — housing, health, education, economic growth. We have to come together to deal with some of these issues.”

A renewed focus on development issues within the country, with renewed vigour and passion would be wonderful. It is something that Creative Consulting & Development Works, as a research, evaluation and communications consultancy working in the development sector definitely supports.

Also read our previous blog piece on the legacy of the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa and leave your comment.

Themba Mzondi, a PR and Media Intern at DEVELOPMENT WORKS, attended the Conference on Ethical Leadership in and through Politics which was held recently at the University of Western Cape. He attended the session titled TOWARDS INTEGRATED SUSTAINABLE HUMAN SETTLEMENTS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL AND WELL-GOVERNED MUNICIPALITIES WITH EFFECTIVE SERVICE DELIVERY – CHALLENGES AND SUCCESSES. Themba shares his perspectives and experiences on MEC Richard Dyanti’s contribution to this debate….

It was on a Friday morning 07 September 2007, when the University of the Western Cape’s lecture theatre was filled to capacity for the event that would be shared by the Western Cape MEC for housing and local government, Mr. Richard Dyantyi.

The aim of the conference was for government to get in touch with its citizens and most of all to discuss about politics, leadership and ethics. Dyanti, who was dressed in a black fancy suite, opened with the statement that many visitors never expected to hear from government. The statement was brave and honest, which is a form of great leadership.

Challenges we are faced with, far exceeds the successes we have achieved’, this was the opening statement of Mr. Richard Dyantyi as he elaborated on service delivery in the Western Cape. According to Richard, poor service delivery is influenced by politics, simply because management of the city of Cape Town is changed all the time, as a result leads to plans and strategies being cancelled or changed and therefore affecting service delivery. He further acknowledged that there are house holds in the Western Cape below the poverty line as ordinary people are suffering because of politics and lack of leadership.

While there is a backlog of 400 000 houses in the Western Cape as a result of the rise in demand which is caused by the influx of people from other regions for a variety of reasons such as education and job opportunities amongst others. Another reason for this is that government produces 6000 houses on an annual basis whereas the demand is 30 000. He advised that as a result of migration to the province, ordinary citizens should not feel threatened or be xenophobic towards people from elsewhere as the province benefits most from the migrants because when they are in Cape Town, they spend money but when the return back home, then they start applying for grants which cost their governments a lot of money. Not only is there a housing backlog of 400 000 houses, there is also a demand to build better house as the house build from 1994 have to be repaired because most of them are falling. According to Dyanti, this was caused by government itself as it previously misjudged the situation by concentrating on quantity rather than quality, which is a learned lesson.

Dyanti also disclosed the government’s programme Isidima’ (Western Cape Human Settlement strategy) that would be implemented to make sure that those Batho Pele’ policies are adhered to and therefore accelerating service delivery which will also enforce good governance. The Isidima’ programme would also be launched to make sure that people are participating in governance and not just a one way democratic system and to make sure that people get houses that they can pride themselves with.

On his closing remarks Dyanti said, “Leadership is not a position, but a perspective”.

 

 

 

 

 

Justin du Toit, a research intern at DEVELOPMENT WORKS, attended a Development Dialogue recently. This opportunity for dialogue was presented by the Isandla Institute and Open Society Foundation for South Africa, on 19 July 2007, at the Centre for the Book in Cape Town…

 

Justin shares his experiences and views of this Dialogue session… and begs the question….How can we, as Capetonians in specific and South Africans in general, engage in meaningful discussion(s) about issues, without being politically infused and, hence, clouded by our political motivations?

 

Since the introduction and advent of the N2 Gateway Pilot housing project by the three spheres of government as the panacea to the huge and ever increasing housing backlog plaguing the Western Cape, and specifically, Cape Town, the project has been inundated with criticisms, debates, and media attention. As a national pilot housing project, the N2 Gateway Pilot Project was launched to measure the government’s new housing policy: Breaking New Ground (BNG), which aimed to create integrated human settlements. According to the Isandla Institute:

An ambitious (some would say, unrealistic) time table was put forward to build 22,000 units to bring about a mixed income neighbourhood. But the project has been plagued by delays, slow delivery, poor workmanship and contestation. Recently, the Minister of Housing unveiled expanded plans for the N2 Gateway Project, suggesting that her department is reflecting on lessons learned from the pilot project thus far and drawing on these lessons to ensure the project realises its potential of becoming an integrated and connected settlement. But will the new proposals address the concerns and criticism levelled against the project? Even if the N2 Gateway project meets current targets, given the complexity and time and cost implications, is the model replicable in other cities and other parts of Cape Town?

It is the latter and former mentioned questions that the dialogue was aimed at providing responses to. Among those representatives to share their perspectives on the above mentioned questions included: Xhanti Sigcawu (Thubelisha Homes); Luthando Ndabambi (N2 Gateway Residents Association); and Prof. Mark Swilling (University of Stellenbosch).

The platform provided to these representatives, however, was not used for the purpose(s) of the Developmental Dialogue, as outlined at the beginning. Apart from the agenda of the Developmental Dialogue, some of the speakers had agenda’s of their own. The first speaker, Mr. Xhanti Sigcawu of Thubelisha Homes (Section 21 Company), did briefly touch on policy and challenges facing the N2 Gateway Pilot Housing Project. The integrated nature of the project was highlighted by Mr. Sigcawu, when he stated, that it was a: pilot, integrated development; merging the differences of the past, in addition he stipulated that, the challenges facing the project is politics and not the policy the fact that there was insufficient land available. It was Mr. Sigcawu’s opening speech which set the tone for the discussion around the extant defects of the N2 Gateway units, and the matter of who is to be blamed for these existing defects. Hence, the foci of the subsequent speakers (excluding that of Prof. Swilling) at the Development Dialogue was around who is to be held accountable for the defects in an attempt of one absolving itself, in shifting the blame and/or passing the buck to previously involved participants. It was increasingly frustrating to sit in a discussion, with a preconceived notion that it would centre on policy and policy gaps and how the project could be improved in order for the N2 Gateway Project to become a prototype for replication in other cities in South Africa.

I am of the belief that the dialogue could however, have gone in the abovementioned direction, if facilitation of it was better in directing discussion to relevant points of discussion and restricting speakers to the time allocated for them to make their points, hence, only allowing for central points of discussion to be made at the Developmental Dialogue. Sitting in the dialogue several questions came to mind, among them were: Why does everything that happens in Cape Town, and the Western Cape have to be injected with the unstable contagion of politics? Why has the spirit and principles of Ubuntu been so easily lost and forgotten? What happened to the notion of Working Together for a better South Africa/ for a Better life’? These were only some of the questions that came to mind whilst sitting and observing how a dialogue, (I believed would have been a favourable context in which to constructively discuss and engage in policy and policy gaps, in an attempt to come to a conclusion as to whether the N2 Gateway Model could be replicated to other cities in South Africa), became increasingly political and inapt.

The only meaningful contribution to the discussion on policy and possible solutions to policy gaps and ways in which the N2 Gateway Project could be improved, in my opinion, was provided by Prof. Mark Swilling of the University of Stellenbosch. Prof. Swilling’s provided a refreshing perspective, which moved away from the previous addresses which was characteristic of pointing the finger and passing the buck. According to Prof. Swilling the land for the poor in the Western Cape is continuously periphalised, because the cost of housing takes into consideration the cost of the land. Prof. Swilling subsequently posed the question, What are the solutions?

He stated in response, that South Africa should get away from the one size fits all solution and into a multiplicity of interventions. Furthermore, he said that housing should be a social process’: with the purpose of building the capacity of households to respond and take advantage of the development strategies the process should be viewed as organisation and mobilisation with the aim of empowering the society’. Prof. Swilling was of the opinion that the N2 Gateway Pilot Housing Project was an example of two worlds of housing that does not meet: firstly, the world of the Technocrat’ concerned about land, space, etc and, secondly; the small, everyday life of inhabiting new settlement provide a context in which to engage about problems. Consequently, a lack of the latter mentioned engagements will therefore lead to an accumulation of inefficiencies. Prof. Swilling highlighted the importance of trust within these engagements. According to Prof. Swilling, without trust there is no way to maximise what the developmental state is doing societal mobilisation.

The functioning of these two worlds, according to Prof. Swilling, makes it extremely difficult in the Cape Town context. However, his solution to the latter mentioned statement, is to create a table for negotiation, and for all participants’ to remain seated at this table of negotiation, until a solution is sought.

Prof. Swilling’s perspective not only provided a fresh opinion on housing with regard to the N2 Gateway Pilot housing project, but a meaningful divergent from the politically motivating and finger pointing addresses of the previous speakers. Prof. Swilling’s viewpoint not only spoke to the N2 Gateway situation but to the South African housing situation in general. In light of Prof. Swilling’s contribution, one begs the question, How can we, as Capetonians in specific and South Africans in general, engage in meaningful discussion(s) about issues, without being politically infused and, hence, clouded by our political motivations?

 

 

 

 

« Newer Posts