In South Africa, the only country in the world where people's right to
water is actually written into the Constitution, the townships
surrounding cities like Johannesburg and Durban have become hotbeds of
resistance to water privatization. More than 10 million residents have
had their water cut off since the government implemented a World
Bank-inspired "cost recovery" program (which makes availability
dependent on a company's ability to recover its costs plus a
profit)--something that never happened in the worst days of apartheid.
More than 100,000 people in Kwazulu-Natal province became ill with
cholera recently after water and sanitation services to local
communities were cut off for nonpayment.
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South Africa
Joseph H. Cooper:
A teacher discovers that sixty years after its publication, Alan Paton's Cry, the Beloved Country still stirs deep emotions about fathers and errant sons.
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South Africa
Dave Zirin:
In South Africa ethnic violence against foreigners is beginning to spread and the growing voice of opposition comes from an unlikely source--soccer stars.
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Environmental Activism
Maude Barlow:
Not everyone considers access to water to be a human right. A global water justice movement is changing that notion.
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Water is at the heart of every fight in this country, where the
population is growing four times faster than the water supply and where
women collectively walk the equivalent of going to the moon and back
sixteen times a day to fetch water for their families. Access to water
is a deeply political issue. Six hundred thousand white farmers consume
60 percent of the country's water supplies for irrigation, while 15
million blacks have no direct access to water. Labor unions like the
South African Municipal Workers Union work with township activists to
organize neighborhood-by-neighborhood resistance, re-hooking up the
water supply and pulling out water meters. Such actions are a growing
sign that citizens are prepared to challenge by action, when they cannot
by law, injustices often originating with foreign-owned firms but
implemented by their own governments.
About Maude Barlow
Maude Barlow is the chairperson of the Council of Canadians. She serves on the
board of the International Forum on Globalization and is the author of
Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water (New Press).
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About Tony Clarke
Tony
Clarke is the director of the Polaris Institute. He serves on the
board of the International Forum on Globalization and is the co-author, with Maude Barlow, of
Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World's
Water (The New Press).
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