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Accessing Basic Urban Services in

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Service Provision Governance in the. Peri-urban Interface of ... Nairobi, Kenya, 7 ... The parastatal water authority EPAL is starved of resources and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Accessing Basic Urban Services in


1
  • Accessing Basic Urban Services in
  • Post-Conflict Angola
  • presented by
  • Development Workshop Angola
  • to the
  • Workshop on
  • Service Provision Governance in the
  • Peri-urban Interface of Metropolitan Areas
  • Regional workshop for Sub-Saharan Africa and Arab
    Region
  • UN-Habitat Building,

Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
2
  • Post-Conflict Angola

Forty years of war has left Angola with a
shattered infrastructure, weak state
administration, massive displacement, large-scale
population movement, food insecurity, overwhelmed
or absent social services, subsistence
agriculture, a mined landscape and a massive
imbalance of resources and wealth. Conventional
wisdom maintains that its the emergency that is
complex. In Angola, the emergency was simple.
Its what comes next thats going to be complex.
Eric de Mul UN Resident Coordinator - 2003
Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
3
  • Angola at Wars End
  • UN Human Development
  • 164 of 178
  • Under 5s mortality
  • 295 / 1,000 (UNICEF 2001)
  • Maternal mortality
  • 1,850 per 100,000 (UNICEF 2001)
  • 63 below poverty line
  • Life Expectancy 40.2 years
  • 25 extreme poverty (UNDP 2002)
  • GNP /Capita 500 (W Bank 2003)

Accessible Areas in April 2002
Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
4
  • Post-War
  • Accomplishments
  • Almost 3 million IDPs spontaneously returned to
    their areas of origin
  • Over 100,000 ex-combatants demobilised
  • UNITA transformed itself into a parliamentary
    opposition party
  • Half a million refugees living in neighbouring
    countries begin to return
  • Luanda continues to grow

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
5
War Induced Urbanisation over 40 Years
Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
6
Social Exclusion of the Poor
  • The last decade has seen a dramatic increase in
    urban and rural poverty indicators.
  • Indicators continue to deteriorate in the
    post-war period.
  • 2/3 of families are living below the poverty
    line.
  • The urban poor in Angola suffer increasing social
    exclusion that inhibits their full participation
    in a post war recovery.
  • The poor have been denied access to the means,
    (such as land tenure, credit and basic services)
    to pull themselves out of poverty

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
7
Informal Market for Services Land
  • 50 of Luandas families purchase their water
    from informal sector sellers.
  • 15 of the poorest families incomes goes to
    purchase water.
  • They therefore consume less and the resulting
    hygiene and health statistics are now some of the
    worst in the world.
  • 75 of the residents in the peri-urban districts
    of Luanda have no clear legal title to the land
    that they occupy.
  • Acquisition of a housing plot and the
    construction of a residence is the only means of
    accumulation of wealth for the poor.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
8
Erosion of Urban Occupants Rights
  • New land legislation is not in compliance with
    international human rights norms and the Habitat
    Agenda (signed by Angola in Istanbul 1996)
  • The law will provide the Government with
    increased powers of expropriation.
  • The poor risk loosing their rights of occupation
    and may be subject to forced removals for the
    purpose of commercial land development.

Development Workshop - 2004
Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
9
Public Private Partnerships
  • State enterprises in collaboration with off-shore
    land development companies have appropriated
    significant public investment designated for
    service infrastructure for high-end, low density
    commercial urban expansion.
  • Installation of publicly funded water an
    sanitation services, greatly increases land
    values for private benefit in these new
    development zones.
  • Trickle down economic arguments are given and the
    suggestion that profits will be reinvested in
    services for high density low-cost housing.
  • Post-war propensity for master-planning and
    commercial growth-pole models divert resources
    from poverty reduction strategies such as
    urban/musseque upgrading.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
10
Potential Sustainability of Public Services
  • The poor pay many times more for untreated river
    water than the urban elite living in the cement
    city pay for clean tap water
  • Informal water market amounts to over US
    35,000,000 per year.
  • Studies demonstrate a willingness to pay fully
    commercial rates for adequate water services.
  • The parastatal water authority EPAL is starved of
    resources and unable to repair or extend their
    water supply network.
  • Income to reconstruct basic services could
    eventually be recovered in water fees if the
    Public Service Providers tariffs were set at
    equitable prices for all consumers.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
11
Sustainable Community Services Project
  • SCSP is one of four Luanda Urban Poverty
    Programme (LUPP) projects funded by DFID being
    implemented since 1999.
  • LUPP members (D W, CARE and Save the Children
    UK) have in partnership with the Government
    developed community service models.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
12
Sustainable Community Services Project-SCSP
  • SCSP has supported over 250 urban communities to
    build standpipes and develop a mechanism of
    community management based on elected water
    committees
  • Fees were paid by consumers and collected by the
    water committees to cover maintenance costs and
    to pay EPAL to supply the water
  • EPAL communities both became interested
    stakeholders and motivated to guarantee the water
    supply and maintain the network.
  • Users acquired for the first time a sense of
    their rights as consumers
  • Standpipes contributed to increase the per capita
    consume from 7,6 to 14,58 litres/day around 92.
  • Water at the standpipes is 20.5 cheaper than
    private tanks.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
13
Community Management Model
  • EPAL does not have the capacity to manage water
    supply down to the level of the bairro nor to
    manage water-points.
  • Water committees elected by the resident users
    carry out the following functions
  • - ensure that the taps are working and maintained
  • - keep the water-point, its surroundings and the
    drainage pipe clean
  • - register the number of days that water flows at
    the water-point
  • - open and close the water-point at the agreed
    hours
  • collect payments from the users and pay water
    bills
  • Register all income and expenditure
  • Bairro-level Associations of Water Committees
    have been formed to enable more effective
    negotiation with EPAL and with local government
    administrations.

Angola Post-Conflict Poverty Reduction
Oslo 18 October 2004
Post-Conflict Angola Accessing Basic
Urban Services March 2005
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