Washington Street in Langa, Cape Town, bustled with activity as the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) hosted pre-State of the Nation Address (SONA) outreach activities on Monday.
Gazebos, banners, buses and cars lined the streets, as various government departments provided services to the community.
The Guga S’Thebe Cultural Centre and the Langa Civic Hall were filled with hundreds of community members.
Some walked, while others took taxis, all eager for essential services, such as applying for identity documents (IDs).
Young people lined up at the Employment and Labour Department’s mobile bus to register on the job seekers' database.
The outreach activities aim to involve all South Africans in the SONA, which will be delivered by President Cyril Ramaphosa on Thursday, 6 February, at 7 pm.
This will be the President’s first SONA as the Head of the Government of National Unity (GNU) in the seventh administration.
Some of the participants were the City of Cape Town officials, the South African Police Service (SAPS), the Western Cape Department of Social Development, the Department of Home Affairs, the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA), the Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC), the Human Rights Commission, Postbank, the Office of Health Standards Compliance (OHSC), and the Energy and Water Sector Education Training Authority (EWSETA).
Acting Director of Public Employment Services, Nokulunga Zazaza, expressed satisfaction in connecting with the community, especially in registering unemployed youth on their database.
The team also offered career counselling to help equip the youth with job hunting and interview skills.
“We also have a programme where we go around to engage with employers and opportunity providers to check if there are opportunities available in their organisation. If they do, they give us the requirements and registration credentials, and we’ll use those to match it with the unemployed who meet the criteria,” she explained.
Although there are Labour Centres located throughout the province, Zazaza stressed that her department aims to connect more closely with local communities.
She expressed a desire for people to secure permanent employment, as most of the companies that reach out to them mostly offer temporary contracts and training services.
“We always want as many people as possible to find employment because our target is unemployed persons, as our department’s focus is employment and labour. We want to do anything that will assist with unemployment.”
Research Officer for the Human Rights Commission, Advocate Tammy Carter, told SAnews that many individuals she encountered in communities were unaware of their rights, even though the country boasts one of the best constitutions in the world.
“One of the primary functions, in terms of the Constitution for the Human Rights Commission, is to promote human rights and human rights culture.
“If people don’t even know their rights, how are they going to even assert those rights?
“For us, it’s important to be invited to events like this, so that we can educate people about their rights.”
She said Chapter 9 bodies had been created to support democracy by being enforcers of human rights.
Most of the people she has been attending to have been raising issues about education, access to water and sanitation, environmental concerns such as littering, which seems to be a big deal in Langa, and access to services such as SASSA and Home Affairs.
“People in Langa have to travel to Athlone to access these services and it costs them a lot of money,” Carter said, adding that was important for the Chapter 9 institutions to come together to help these communities.
Customer Care Assistant from the Western Social Development Department, Siphosihle Qingana, said together with his colleague, he has been providing information about their services since this morning.
These include childcare protection programmes, support for the elderly, substance abuse assistance, and registration of non-profit organisations (NPOs).
“People need help or advice about child protection. Some children don’t have birth certificates. Other people were seeking funding for their NPOs and asking about registering NPOs,” Qingana told SAnews.
Ministries and departments will continue to hold various public engagement activities for the remainder of the week.
According to the GCIS, these events aim to encourage South Africans to familiarise themselves with the content of SONA, enabling them to contribute to discussions and proposals for economic growth and development.
South Africans are encouraged to tune it and participate in this important national milestone. – SAnews.gov.za