South African riots over poor services, poverty hit record in 2018

Date:

JOHANNESBURG – Riots in South Africa linked to public anger over poor government services and poverty have hit a record high in 2018, data showed on Wednesday, a sign one analyst said the ruling African National Congress should not ignore ahead of elections next year.

Demonstrators cheer as they tear down a street lamp during a protest against what they said was the government's failure to provide adequate housing facilities and other basic services, in Cape Town's Langa township, July 9, 2014. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
Demonstrators cheer as they tear down a street lamp during a protest against what they said was the government’s failure to provide adequate housing facilities and other basic services, in Cape Town’s Langa township, July 9, 2014. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

President Cyril Ramaphosa has pledged to improve governance and kickstart an economy mired in recession, but high levels of public discontent reflect the challenge the ANC faces as it tries to reform Africa’s most industrialised economy.

Dubbed “service delivery protests,” the number of such incidents had hit 198 by the end of September, the data from research organisation Municipal IQ showed, surpassing the previous record for a full calendar year of 191 in 2014, when former president Jacob Zuma was in power.

The riots typically see protesters blocking roads with burning debris, hurling rocks or bricks and clashing with the police. Services they are demanding include housing, running water, paved roads and other amenities that many poor black people remain without more than two decades after the end of apartheid.

The riots were spread between areas governed both by the ANC and by the opposition, however, suggesting it was hard to draw a direct link between them and the popularity of the ruling party.

The highest number of incidents – almost 20 percent – were recorded in the Eastern Cape province, a traditional stronghold for the , which has been in power since the end of apartheid in 1994.

That was followed by 17 percent in Gauteng province, which includes the financial hub of Johannesburg and the capital Pretoria – both run by the opposition Democratic Alliance party.

“Whether or not these protests signal a shift in support for the ANC is another matter,” said Gary van Staden, a political analyst with NKC African Economics.

“Still, the ANC would be extremely foolish to ignore or dismiss this data, as it is a real indicator of discontent,” he said.

Kwa-Zulu Natal province, another key ANC base and the heartland of South Africa’s largest ethnic group the Zulus, has accounted for 15 percent of the protests so far in 2018.

The ANC and officials from the Cooperative Governance ministry, which is responsible for local government, were not immediately available for comment. Reuters.

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

Domestic worker sues Pitso Mosimane and his wife for R5,7m over injuries

South African football coach Pitso Mosimane and his wife are being sued for R5,7million by their former domestic worker after she claims to have sustained injuries that left her borderline disabled and unable to bear children while working for them.

South Africa election: ANC loses battle for Zuma’s MK party name and logo

South Africa's African National Congress (ANC) has lost a legal bid to stop a new party from using the name and logo of its former armed wing. The governing ANC had argued that uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK), headed by ex-President Jacob Zuma, had breached trademark law.

‘Distasteful and opportunistic’: Forbes family slams book on AKA and Anele Tembe

The family of slain South African rapper AKA has slammed a book that purportedly details his tumultuous relationship with his late fiancé, Anele Tembe, describing the expose as “distasteful and opportunistic”.

“I loved Kiernan so much:” Anele Tembe’s father denies getting AKA killed

Moses Tembe, the father of slain rapper AKA’s fiancé Anele Tembe, has denied having a hand in the musician’s murder last year, saying that his family had been victims of a smear campaign by faceless people.