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Invest 2010 soccer money in a happy, healthy and safer South Africa

Miriam Mannak - 11/18/2006

In four years from now, South Africa will be swamped by millions of soccer fans from all over the world to be a witness to their team's fight for victory in the World Cup Soccer 2010. South Africa is proud to host the Mother of All Soccer Events and to make it a success billions and billions of rands will be spent on this once-off event. Billions that could have been used to address the country's most important challenges, to make the Rainbow Nation a better place for all, instead of for a few.

According to the latest statistics, South Africa has reserved over 15 billion rand (or $2 million) for the 2010 World Cup Soccer. Just a few weeks before releasing these figures, the budget was reported to be12 billion rand, but that is a slight detail.

More than half of the money (8,4 billion rand) will be spend on the construction and renovation of the ten soccer stadiums across the country, and 6,7 billion rand will be go to the improvement of the public transport, policing, arts and culture, emergency medical services, border control and other costs.


The Dark Side

It is certainly admirable that a country is prepared to do anything to prove itself to the outside world. I truly believe South Africa will be able to pull it off, and that the World Cup Soccer 2010 will be a memorable one. But to me there is a dark side to a bright and happy story. While billions are being put into this event, millions of South Africans are still waiting for the better future that was promised to them not so long ago. These billions – and the soccer total amount of money spend on the soccer event is expected to escalate with 20% to 50% - should be used to address priority issues such as education, health care, service delivery, housing, an adequate HIV/AIDS policy, poverty alleviation, safety and security, and other challenges South Africans face day after day.

Although the seeds of democracy have sprouted, many South Africans are still waiting for the changes that were promised not so long ago. A drive from Cape Town's city centre to the airport is enough to realise that. It is impossible to miss the kilometers of shacks along the high way. Here, the living conditions are simply said inhuman.


Two million shack dwellers

Estimates of Habitat for Humanity – an organization that assists communities to build low cost but decent houses – show that almost one in four South Africans (10 million people) live in poverty housing. Of this group almost two million live in shacks pieced together with cardboard, corrugated iron, scrap, wood and other materials. In these informal dwellings service delivery is non-existent, running water and electricity are scarce and sanitary facilities are of extremely poor condition. Crime and violence are part of everyday life, which is characterized by hardship in the broadest sense of the word. Apparently, the housing backlog in South Africa is estimated at 2,5 million houses.

A quick calculation tells me that 16 billion rand, if spend by Habitat for Humanity on the construction of houses, can result in the construction of at least 355 555 homes of 50 square meter with internal walls, plumbing, electricity and bathroom fixtures. These costs include labour costs and the materials.


The state of state hospitals

Housing is not the only issue faced by millions of South African. Inadequate public health care is another. The majority of South Africans – 27 million people - depend on state hospitals as they cannot afford private clinics. The situation in many of these facilities is heartbreaking and sickening: Lack of materials, lack of medicine, lack of funding, lack of staff (especially in the rural areas), and overworked health personnel are the tip of the iceberg.

Visiting various state hospitals across South Africa, the Democratic Alliance (DA) came across wards that were infested with vermin and reeking of human waste, patients sharing beds, waste piling up in the hallways and floors flooded by broken toilets. In a particular hospital, doctors had reported that sometimes they had been forced to operate by torchlight due to failing electricity and the non-existence of a generator. In this same hospital, situated in the Mpumalanga province, nurses stated that at one stage "they had been expected to keep intensive care patients live by manually pumping air into their lungs during the many power black-outs."

Apart from investing in housing and healthcare, more attention should be paid to education. And safety and security. Not only in the city centers but also in and around South Africa's townships and disadvantaged areas, which are tormented by crime and violence.


Invest in happy and healthy society

In reality, all eyes and wallets are focused on a once-off event instead of on the one thing South Africa needs best: A healthy and happy society in which the poorer are not getting poorer but are given a chance to break free from their situation, a society in which everybody has the chance to a good education and good health care, a society in which no one have to live in a shack along the highway, and where one does not have to be afraid for the nightfall.

Miriam Mannak has degrees in Journalism, International Relations, American Studies and International Development Studies. As part of her studies, she's done research on crime in Netherlands, landmines in Cambodia, political, economical and social relations between US and Europ in 2003 versus transatlantic relations during Cold War, and the role of the UN in the genocide in Rwanda. Ms. Mannak currently resides in the Republic of South Africa, and in the past also lived in Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire) and Holland. She worked for various publications, including De Telegraaf, Gooi - en Eemlander, Sp!ts, The Cape Times, Zuid-Afrika Huis, De Jonge Journalist and Backpackers Galaxy.

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