2019 service delivery protests
South African protest From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2019 service delivery protests refers to a series of protests and civil disturbances taking place across urban areas of South Africa related to poor service delivery that started in Alexandra on 3 April 2019.[4][5]
2019 service delivery protests | |
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Date | 3 April 2019 – May 2019 |
Location | Urban areas of South Africa |
Caused by | Lack of delivery of municipal services |
Methods | |
Resulted in |
After starting in Alexandra on 3 April the protestors marched to the wealthy nearby neighbourhood of Sandton five days later to gain more attention.[6] On 9 April the trade union SAFTU stated their support for the protests and called on other areas in Gauteng province to join.[7] By 11 April 2019 the protests had spread to other major cities in the rest of the country.[8] Other than Alexandra protests occurred in Hammanskraal, Roodepoort, Vereeniging, Kroonstad, Blackheath,[9] Tshwane,[10] Bekkersdal, Orange Grove,[11] Nomzamo[12] Lingelethu East,[13] Bergville,[14] Bekkersdal,[15] Caledon,[16] Eersteriver, Rus-ter-Vaal,[2] Khayelitsha,[17] Riverlea,[18] and Soweto.[19]
The major political parties traded accusations over the cause of the riots.[6] The African National Congress (ANC) accused the Democratic Alliance (DA) of not effectively delivering services to the protesting communities[20] and the DA made a counter accusation that it was ANC governance in Johannesburg two years before was the root cause of poor service delivery in Alexandra.[21] The protests were openly supported by the trade union SAFTU who called on other areas to join the protests.[22] The DA[23] and Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) accused the ANC of instigating and spreading the protests to discredit them in the run up to the 2019 South African general election.[24][25]
Notable South African academic Steven Friedman, criticised media coverage of the protests for "denigrat[ing] poor people by offering a distorted picture of their lives" and supporting politically motivated narratives that the protests were incited by political parties instead of being driven by genuine grievances.[26]
See also
References
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