Saturday, November 29, 2025

Weekly South Africa Round Up

  

Political Killings Task Team Disbanded
Confusion surrounds the SAPS inquiry into the disbandment of the Political Killings Task Team. Communities are calling for clarity, as the decision raises concerns about accountability and safety.

NSPCA Seeks Transparency
The NSPCA has questioned the DA’s appointment of Willie Aucamp, urging transparency in leadership decisions. Animal welfare advocates say openness is key to building public trust.

Samsung Partners with SA Rugby
Samsung has teamed up with SA Rugby, bringing Galaxy technology to national teams and the Vodacom URC. The partnership highlights the growing role of tech in sports performance.

Leroy Merlin Invests in Cornubia
Retail giant Leroy Merlin is investing R220 million in Cornubia, boosting eThekwini’s economy. The development promises jobs and growth for local communities.

Weather Warnings for Gauteng
Authorities have issued flood and hail warnings for Gauteng tomorrow. Residents are urged to stay alert and prepare for possible disruptions.

GBVF Declared a National Crisis
President Ramaphosa has declared gender‑based violence and femicide a national crisis. Activists welcome the move but stress that urgent action must follow.

Cape Flats Youth Murders
Nearly 500 children and teens have been murdered in the Cape Flats over five years. The shocking statistic underscores the urgent need for community safety interventions.

Tembisa Hospital Protest
Protesters delivered a memorandum to Premier Lesufi’s office, demanding accountability for looting at Tembisa Hospital. Health activists say corruption undermines patient care.

Gigaba Speaks on Political Future
Former minister Malusi Gigaba has spoken about his political future after stepping aside from ANC activities. His comments spark debate about leadership renewal in South Africa.

Cape Town Desalination Plant Concerns
Cape Town’s proposed R5 billion desalination plant could lead to steep tariff hikes. While the project promises water security, residents worry about affordability.

Soweto Marathon Incident
A taxi driver struck a marathon runner in Soweto and attempted to flee. The incident highlights ongoing tensions between road safety and sporting events.

O’Sullivan Challenges Testimony
Forensic investigator Paul O’Sullivan has challenged testimony before Parliament, seeking to testify himself. His intervention could reshape the inquiry’s direction.

Unite for Change Calls for Ethical Leadership
Unite for Change says South Africa needs leaders guided by ethics, not criminal influence. The call resonates with citizens demanding integrity in politics.

MKP Motion Collapses
The MK Party’s motion to remove Ntuli has collapsed. Analysts say the failed move reflects deeper divisions within the party.

Hawks Hunt Suspect in Cop Murder
The Hawks are hunting a suspect linked to the murder of a Cape Town police officer. The case has reignited debates about crime and justice in the city.

 

OK, so no real GOOD NEWS yet!

 

 #SouthAfrica #BreakingNews #GautengWeather #CapeTown

 

 

No space for culture: ‘matchbox housing’ leaves residents unable to honour customs in a South African town

 


In South Africa, urban planning is influenced by western-centric and colonial planning, including social housing, building technologies, architectural form, master plans, zoning, and land tenure systems.

The colonial and apartheid planning policies and practices from the 1930s gave European settlers the sole rights to live, work and be educated in urban areas, where they had complete freedom of movement. On the other hand, the presence of African people in urban settlements was strictly controlled through pass laws, spatial segregation, and systems of land tenure that restricted them from living in towns and cities.

If Black people needed to stay close to the city, they were accommodated in hostels designed for single workers (not families) or houses in townships – places on the far edges of towns or cities, without amenities and designated “Black only” by the apartheid system.

Townships generally allocated small plots to each house. The houses built by the government during apartheid all looked the same and had very low minimum standards, such as rows of “matchbox” (two- to four-roomed) houses for small, nuclear families or prefabricated houses. This reflected the dominant white view that Africans should only be temporary residents in urban settlements.

The old South African townships had inadequate sanitation facilities. Toilets either did not exist or were built outside (a bucket inside a single cubicle, or a pit or flush toilet). After apartheid ended in 1994, access to safe toilets and sanitation was recognised as a human right and many local governments built new toilets.

As geographers, we are interested in how space is planned and used. In our latest research, we looked at the interplay between cultural practices and urban residential planning in the Makanaskop township in Makhanda, South Africa.

In many South African townships, planning still does not fully align with the cultural, social and economic realities of the residents. This study offered an opportunity to find out whether there was a disconnect between planning and cultural practices.

Our study shows that the plot size, house size and spatial organisation of built structures are often disconnected from residents’ needs, highlighting the importance of culturally aware planning for social housing.

Life, land and rituals in a tiny township

Makanaskop was established during apartheid in about 1957. By 1974, 200 homes had been constructed there and it has continued to expand. It is located about 4.5km away from the town centre in Makhanda. Today it is a mixed-income residential space composed of low- and middle-income residents, the majority of whom are culturally amaXhosa.

There are two types of houses in Makanaskop. First, single-family detached houses – free-standing residential buildings that are not connected to adjacent houses. Second, single-family semi-detached houses connected to neighbouring units through one or more shared walls.

Over time, some of these buildings were expanded to house bigger, extended families.

Makanaskop initially had a bucket toilet system and later also received outside flush toilets from the government.

We interviewed the members of nine households who had cultural land uses and surveyed their properties. We found several amaXhosa cultural practices that require designated spaces and specific spatial organisation. The kraal, or ubuhlanti, is a rectangular wooden enclosure where amaXhosa practise their spirituality and perform rituals. These include kubuyisa, the ritual where an ox is slaughtered and sacrificed to appease the ancestors after a death in the family.

Another ritual is ukutyiswa amasi, when a woman who has married into the family is invited into the kraal to be introduced to the ancestors.

Imbeleko is a ceremony held in the kraal when newborn members of the clan are introduced to the elders and ancestors.

The kraal is also an integral part of the circumcision ritual known as ulwaluko, which is performed when adolescent males are initiated into manhood. Boys seclude themselves from society, undergo circumcision, and receive guidance on navigating this society and communities in their capacity as men.

Before young males undergo this transition, they meet in the kraal with male family members and respected male members of the community. Upon their return, they once again visit the kraal before entering the house to complete the ritual.

A kraal can be used to house culturally important livestock, even in urban settlements where this is typically against the local bylaws.

In Makanaskop, the kraal is at the front or back of the plot, depending on cultural preferences or spatial limitations.

However, the kraal is not the only land use needed in this space. Culturally, rondavels for spiritual and cultural practices, and housing for extended family, are often needed. Additional land uses include water storage tanks, parking, gardens, washing lines and sheds. State-provided toilets are outside too.

We found when we surveyed the houses that, alongside limited plot size, the positioning of land use activities limited the potential for this open space to be used or developed.

Misalignment of cultural practices and urban planning

The first issue relates to the positioning of state-provided structures on the plot. This could provide a challenge in positioning the kraal, for example, because some outside toilets are in the middle of the backyard and the positioning of other land uses is dependent on this.

If there’s no space for the kraal other than near the toilet, people can’t go to the toilet freely. The kraal is a sacred space and non-family members or new brides are not allowed in it. This makes toilets in the middle of the backyard a real problem.

As one person we interviewed said:

If it was up to us and the plot was large enough, everything would be at the back; however, that would mean placing the kraal next to the toilet. This would be disrespectful as the kraal is a sacred space.

The position of the house can also prove to be a problem. Traditionally, some people believe the kraal should be at the front for ancestral protection. State-built houses are often positioned very close to the front boundary of the plot, however.

The second challenge is that small plots limit space for cultural and more practical land uses. One resident we interviewed had an informal agreement with a neighbour to extend their house onto the neighbour’s property, but had no official sanction for this. Another had illegally extended their plot onto the public verge to accommodate the kraal.

What needs to happen next

Due to the perpetuation of western-centric planning norms, the cultural practices and needs of Black people are ignored when townships and state-provided houses are built. Faced with these constraints, residents have had to adapt their cultural practices or contravene planning systems and bylaws through insurgent planning and quiet encroachment.

Before delivering social services, planners need first to understand residents’ cultural practices to avoid future conflicts.

(The research this article is based on was co-authored by Nangamso Makhiwane of Rhodes University).The Conversation

Sinenhlanhla Memela, Senior lecturer, Rhodes University and Philippa Irvine, Lecturer, Rhodes University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. 

Thursday, November 27, 2025

The "License to Fail"? How the New Business Bill Could Stifle South Africa's Economy

 


The Department of Small Business Development has gazetted the draft Business Licensing Bill, a piece of legislation that proposes a radical overhaul of how commerce is regulated in South Africa. At its core, the Bill seeks to repeal the Business Act of 1991 and introduce a mandatory national registry for every business operating in the country—from the largest corporate retailer to the smallest street hawker.

While the Department argues this will "professionalize" the sector and clamp down on illicit trade, economic analysts and civil society groups are raising alarm bells. Here is why the Bill is being viewed as a dangerous step backward and how it specifically threatens the livelihoods of informal traders.

 Why the Bill is Bad for Business

The primary criticism of the Bill is that it attempts to solve economic stagnation with more red tape. In an environment where South Africa desperately needs to remove barriers to entry, this legislation erects new ones.

  • Bureaucratic Overreach: The Bill grants municipal officials and police sweeping powers to inspect businesses and seize goods without a warrant. This "warrantless search" provision is arguably unconstitutional and opens the door to abuse and corruption.
  • Administrative Nightmare: It forces every single business to apply for a license valid for only five years. Critics argue that municipalities, many of which are already collapsing under dysfunction, simply do not have the capacity to process millions of new license applications efficiently.
  • Vagueness and Uncertainty: The criteria for granting licenses are broad and include "preferential" conditions that are ill-defined. This creates uncertainty for investors and gives officials too much discretion, which is a breeding ground for bribery.

 

How Informal Traders Will Lose

The informal economy—the lifeline for millions of unemployed South Africans—stands to suffer the most under this new regime.

  • Criminalization of Livelihoods: Currently, many informal traders operate legally without needing complex licenses. This Bill effectively criminalizes anyone trading without a permit. A grandmother selling vegetables to survive could theoretically face fines, jail time, or have her stock confiscated simply for not being on a national database.
  • Barriers to Entry: The cost and complexity of compliance (filling out forms, paying fees, renewing licenses) favor established, formal businesses with legal teams. Informal traders often lack the time, literacy, or funds to navigate this bureaucracy, forcing them to close down or operate illegally underground.
  • Harassment and confiscation: By empowering inspectors to seize goods from "unlicensed" traders, the Bill legitimizes the harassment often faced by street vendors. For a trader living hand-to-mouth, the confiscation of stock is not just a setback; it is an economic death sentence.
  • Xenophobic Undertones: The Bill places strict limitations on foreign nationals, requiring valid visas for business licenses.      In the informal sector, where many refugees and asylum seekers trade to survive, this is seen as a targeted attempt to purge foreign-owned spaza shops, potentially fueling social tension rather than solving economic issues.

 Conclusion

By treating every small hustle like a major corporation requiring state sanction, the draft Business Licensing Bill risks strangling the very entrepreneurial spirit South Africa needs to survive. Instead of support and development, it offers regulation and punishment.

 

Note: This article is an opinion piece based on the draft version of the Bill. Readers are encouraged to review the official Government Gazette for full legal details.