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Monday, June 10, 2013
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JOHANNESBURG, June 10: City authorities in Johannesburg, South
Africa’s economic hub, have unveiled an ambitious plan to undo urban
inequalities of the apartheid era and turn the continent’s wealthiest
city into the “New York of Africa”, reports AFP.
City mayor Parks
Tau says the 10-year scheme, which is set to cost some $10 billion (7.5
billion euros), will lead to a “new era” for Johannesburg and its 4.4
million inhabitants.
Plans are on the cards for an extensive new
road and railroad network, better houses and revamped buildings to
spruce up the city, originally built on a gold rush in the late 19th
century. The inspiration for change is the cosmopolitan New York City in
the United States, with its attractive bridges, roads and efficient
subway network and parks.
“We are re-inventing the city of Johannesburg,” Tau said.
“We are turning this city into a New York of Africa,” he added.
Officials
say the project will correct urban planning dating back to white
minority rule, which pushed designated black areas to the outskirts of
the city, with poor access to transport and other infrastructure and
services.
“This is a major step in reversing the inequalities caused by the apartheid regime,” Tau told the news agency.
In
some cases, commuting between the city centre and northern suburbs
currently takes up to nearly two hours. A network of enhanced public
transportation enabling people in outlying areas to make connections by
trains, buses and taxis will be established, together with cycle paths.
Alison
Todes of the University of Witwatersrand’s School of Architecture
argues that the time has come for an efficient transport system that
will also help reduce the city’s carbon footprint.
“The city is
quite spread out and a lot of people use private cars. Less travel time
and less cars on the road will also be good for the environment,” Todes
said.
The launch three years ago of a high speed train service
linking Johannesburg and the administrative capital Pretoria was a
milestone in providing efficient public transport.
But the train
serves limited routes and high fares make it inaccessible to the bulk of
the working class, who rely on crowded privately-run minibus taxis and
ageing state-owned metro trains. “Our economy is growing, so we saw a
need to prioritise investment on infrastructure to boost the economic
capacity of the city,” Tau said. The city will finance the renovations
from its own coffers.
Despite its established wealth, boasting the
largest concentration of dollar millionaires in the country, parts of
Johannesburg are dirt poor.
Clusters of palatial homes protected by
gates and electric fences stand side- by-side with sprawling slums that
have no running water and sanitation.
Nearly half a million of
Johannesburg’s population lives in informal housing. Some have been on a
waiting list for state- subsidised houses for 15 years.
Almost a fifth of the total renovation budget will be channelled to low-cost housing schemes dubbed “corridors of freedom”.
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