Disaster relief: why the state is left out
23 July 2021
The shortages of basic supplies such as food, medicine, baby milk and other provisions in the unrest-stricken areas of KwaZulu-Natal once again, as happened so often during the past two years, mobilised civil structures to take over the state’s responsibility with regard to disaster relief. While the state is establishing committees and convening meetings with willing organisations to plan disaster relief, thousands of tons of supplies already are being moved every day outside the framework of the state on trucks, by air and on bakkies to alleviate suffering in towns and cities. Private security guards escort convoys where the SAPS and the defence force are unable to do it.
Disaster relief is a more general need in the agricultural environment, but it is a luxury. Apart from limited contributions from the Western Cape Provincial Government, there is precious little assistance for farmers who are going to rack and ruin because of fires, unrest, droughts or floods. Farmers are more experienced in organising private disaster relief, and for as long as the ANC stays in power, they and their rural communities themselves will have to provide for relief to afflicted areas. This self-sufficiency outside the structures, budgets, scope and influence of the state is in extent and effectiveness fairly unique in the world, and organised agriculture as well as foreign governments are finding it fascinating.
Reports of how disaster relief in the form of fodder and food parcels had been keeping large parts of the Karoo and the Little Karoo going through eight years of the worst drought in human memory were read all over the world. Then there were the politically instigated fires in October 2020 in the north-western Free State, destroying a hundred thousand hectares, but the same group of organisations that coordinate drought relief, delivered enough fodder, fencing material and food parcels within a couple of weeks to allow the entire area to survive. Even the livestock was replaced.
The irrational COVID-19 regulations announced in April 2020 destroyed hundreds of thousands of job opportunities and left families without income or food. Farmers realised that there was little they could do to buffer the damning impact on the economy, but they delivered food such as vegetables, fruit and meat in rural areas where the state never showed a face. This disaster relief made a difference even deep into urban areas, so much so that Panyaza Lesufi of the ANC in Gauteng tried to nationalise and centralise it. The farmers simply refused, because trust in the state was lacking.