PRESS RELEASE
INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN: WORLD CLASS CITIES FOR ALL
10 a.m. – 12 p.m., 28 November 2006
COSATU Boardroom
10th floor, 1 – 5 Leyds Street
Braamfontein, Johannesburg
OUR CHALLENGE TO SOUTH AFRICAN MUNICIPALITIES:
MAKE YOUR CITY A WORLD CLASS CITY FOR ALL
IN THE RUN-UP TO THE FIFA WORLD CUP IN 2010
It has become a predictable reality that, when a country prepares to host a high-profile international event, the country and its local government authorities prepare to create “World Class Cities” of a particular type, i.e. World Class Cities which:
- will attract foreign investment;
- have modern up-to-date infrastructure;
- have no visible signs of urban decay;
- have smooth traffic flows;
- have no visible poor people or social problems.
This usually includes the eviction of street vendors, sometimes accompanied by “slum clearance” programmes in which the poorest members of the population also lose their homes. Many of the newly homeless, being unable to enter the formal labour market, are also in the informal economy – many of them street vendors – which means that such people lose both their homes and their livelihoods at the same time, leaving little for them to fall back upon as their survival strategy. Unless viable alternatives are provided.
Gender
implications:
The creation of typical "World Class cities” often results in
prior development plans for the poor being abandoned or shelved. On the
streets this gives rise to pitched battles, which often militarises the
struggles of street vendors, and the women literally disappear from the public
profile as the development issues also disappear from the plans. Women are
pauperised by removing their source of livelihood in the public spaces of the
cities concerned, while their male colleagues fight a massive defensive battle.
If there is a settlement at the end of the struggle, the militants are
the ones with whom the authorities settle – while those displaced at the
outset (mostly the women) remain unseen, forgotten, and have to start from the
beginning again looking for a place to earn their livelihoods.
StreetNet International is launching a World Class Cities for ALL (WCCA) campaign to challenge this traditional approach to building World Class Cities and create a new, more inclusive concept of “World Class Cities for All” with the participation of street vendors and other groups of the (urban) poor. The campaign will have a strong focus on women and other vulnerable street vendors who are the first to lose their livelihoods and the most invisible in most plans for “World Class Cities”.
Attached is a list of organizations which have already joined StreetNet as partners in the campaign.
In accordance with these objectives, we invite Municipalities to commit to the following WCCA DEMANDS TO MUNICIPALITIES:
- local govt. representation to include regulators as well as enforcement agents, and SALGA or provincial local govt. association representatives;
- street vendors to be directly represented by their own elected representatives, with due regard to the representation of women (in the proportions in which they are found on the streets) and vendors with disabilities;
- street vendors operating as fronts for small or big business, or with substantive conflicts of interest, will not be regarded as bona fide street vendors’ representatives;
- forum structures to be determined with participation by all parties to avoid unintended marginalisation or de facto closed shop situations;
- Municipal workers’ unions (SAMWU and IMATU) and SAFA (S.A. Football Association) to be represented as interested stakeholders.
World
Class Cities for all !!
No
relocation without alternatives !!
Negotiation
and social dialogue !!
Nothing
for us without us !!
Issued by:
Ms Pat Horn
International Co-ordinator
StreetNet International
Press Conference 28th November 2006.
Tel. 031 307 4038 (StreetNet)
031 201 3528 (res)
076 706 5282 (cel)
e-mail: stnet@iafrica.com (StreetNet)
phaps@netactive.co.za (personal)
phapssa@hotmail.com (additional)