Kalingalinga

Kalingalinga is a low-income, high-density settlement[1] east of Lusaka, in Zambia. As of 2013, it comprised 25,000 to 30,000 residents;[2] a very poor area, it borders the wealthier townships of Mtendere and Kabulonga, and many of its occupants are poor people who were discouraged from settling in Lusaka and moved as squatters to outlying regions of the city.[1]

History

It was one of Lusaka's earliest squatter settlements. By the late 1960s, many of Kalingalinga's residents were lured to Chainama Hills (later renamed "Mtendere"[3]), a newly opened development that promised "water, good roads, schools, and a clinic".[4] Those who left for Chainama Hills were mostly supporters of president Kaunda's UNIP, leaving behind a population with considerable support for the opposition Northern Rhodesian African National Congress.[4] By the late 1970s,[4] assistance from the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit in the form of a major urban upgrading project provided a school, water, street lighting, and other necessities, such as loans and legal assistance in applying for land ownership.[2] According to a report by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme, by 1991 the urban upgrading of Kalingalinga "enabled 4400 low-income squatter households to obtain improved houses, services and security of tenure". It noted, on the political situation, that progress initially had been slow because the population mostly supported the political opposition, but also that local organizations had been quite effective in the initiation, planning, and execution of the improvements.[5] An overview of the project, which was completed in 1987 and supported until 1992, is provided by the World Bank Group.[6]

On the difference in status between inhabitants of Kalingalinga and other townships, former Minister of Foreign Affairs Katele Kalumba, who had been instrumental in implementing policies ostensibly designed to clean up the townships but which in reality mainly harassed the poor, said "Whose town is it? It appears that if you live in Woodlands, Kabulonga, and so on, you are the town owners, and if you live in Kaunda square or Kalingalinga or places like this, you are simply strangers in the city who can be moved and resettled somewhere".[7]

Government and challenges

Self-regulation in Kalingalinga proved difficult at times, though it has served as a model for the development of the administration of other townships; the Kalingalinga community proved it could organize for the common good, even at the expense of immediate personal gain. For instance, when it became accepted to use the locally abundant laterite (rather than cement blocks) to build houses, many inhabitants began digging up the soil to build their own houses and to sell on the market, thereby harming the soil and disturbing the drainage of rainwater; the soil was no longer used to grow vegetables on. The problems exacerbating, the community decided to ban the digging for laterite in the settlement itself, and a neighboring site was opened where locals could dig up laterite for a small fee.[8] The mixed quality of Kalingalinga, where older residents run small businesses and work with locally produced material, while the younger generation feels more economic and other progress has been made, makes it "a microcosm of our society and a mirror of our progress", according to Andrew Sardanis.[9]

One of Kalingalinga's challenges is the much more frequent flooding and other weather-related incidents. Especially housing is impacted by flooding; a study showed that while locals are taking measures to adapt to the changing circumstances, there is little support from the government.[10]

Another challenge is HIV/Aids. Our Lady's Hospice in Kalingalinga has participated in studies on the disease,[11] and received a grant from the British High Commission for promoting AIDS awareness and peer education programs.[12] The hospice is supported by Irish Aid,[13] Contesa Charity,[14] and other donors.[15]

In 1990, the government's removal of food subsidies led to widespread rioting in Lusaka; the riots started in Kalingalinga before spreading to the city center, killing over 30 people.[16]

Socioeconomic characteristics

According to a 1992/1993 survey, almost 70% of women and slightly over 40% of men in Kalingalinga were involved in agriculture; over 30% of women and less than 20% of men were involved in (dry-season) gardening.[17]

Some young boys from Kalingalinga fell victim to a scheme set up by a Texas group called Teaching Teachers to Teach, supposedly a Baptist missionary organization that took some boys over the United States to sing in a choir. In return for their singing, money was to be sent back for schools and other essentials, and the boys were to receive schooling. However, the boys were practically enslaved in the US, forced to sing up to seven concerts per day and to dig a swimming pool for the minister leading the group, Keith Grimes, who pocketed the choir's earnings. By 2000, Grimes had died and his daughter was trying to do damage control when the group of boys had found out that nothing was done to improve the situation in Kalingalinga. She tried to have a number of boys deported, which led the US Immigration and Naturalization Service to investigate the matter and, in the end, free the choir. Grimes's daughter and her husband were never charged, since the abuse occurred months before the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 was passed.[18][19]

Recreational activities

The charity Africa On The Ball helped found the football team Kalingalinga FC in 2011,[20] a team which is as much about playing football as it is about proper nutrition and education.[21] The sale of a jersey by Kenya-born football player Victor Wanyama in 2013 was to pay for a team bus.[22]

gollark: If you really need a bitcoin ticker in your car, just duct-tape a tablet to the... dashboard thingy.
gollark: Repairability in general, as in the ability to repair it...
gollark: Why not?
gollark: I feel like cars are mostly overengineered for the majority of things which are actually done with them.
gollark: You may have a Tesla, but I have an 8MB copy of the shrek movie.

References

  1. Burdette, Marcia M.; Moser, Caroline; Ziervogel, Gina (1988). Zambia: Between Two Worlds. Westview Press. pp. 41–52. ISBN 9780566007705.
  2. Frayne, Bruce; Moser, Caroline; Ziervogel, Gina (2013). Climate Change, Assets and Food Security in Southern African Cities. Routledge. p. 135ff. ISBN 9781136502026.
  3. Hansen, Karen Tranberg (1996). "Gender, Generation, and Access to Housing in Zambia". In Schlyter, Ann (ed.). A Place to Live: Gender Research on Housing in Africa. Nordic Africa Institute. pp. 127–44. ISBN 9789171063885.
  4. Hansen, Karen Tranberg (1997). Keeping House in Lusaka. Columbia UP. pp. 58–64. ISBN 9780231081429.
  5. Assessment of Experience with the Project Approach to Shelter Delivery for the Poor. UN-HABITAT. 1991. p. 6. ISBN 9789211311655.
  6. "Kalingalinga Integrated Upgrading Project". Massachusetts Institute of Technology. World Bank Group. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  7. Resnick, Danielle (2013). Urban Poverty and Party Populism in African Democracies. Cambridge UP. pp. 71–72. ISBN 9781107036802.
  8. Oesterreich, Jürgen (2013-03-13). "Das Recht auf kommunale Entwicklung. Lokale Legitimität als Motor für Entwicklung am Beispiel von Kalingalinga, Lusaka". In Ulla Selchow (ed.). Menschenrechte und Entwicklungszusammenarbeit: Anspruch und politische Wirklichkeit. Franz-Josef Hutter. Springer-Verlag. pp. 141–52. ISBN 9783322809087. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  9. Sardanis, Andrew (2014). Zambia: The First 50 Years. I.B.Tauris. p. 320. ISBN 9781780768212.
  10. Simatele, Danny M. (October 2010). "Climate change adaptation in Lusaka, Zambia: A case study of Kalingalinga and Linda Compounds" (PDF). Global Urban Research Centre Working Paper 6. Manchester University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  11. Screening Instruments for Neurocognitive Impairment in HIV/AIDS Patients: A Pilot Study Utilizing Non-physician Healthcare Providers in Kalingalinga, Lusaka, Zambia. ProQuest. 2008. p. 11. ISBN 9780549611004.
  12. "Zambia: Our-Lady's Hospice in K87million Boost". The Times of Zambia. 12 April 2005. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  13. "Irish Aid in Zambia: Our Lady's Hospice and Umoyo Day Center for Orphans". SupremeMasterTV. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  14. "CONTESA Heath Programmes". CONTESA Charity. Archived from the original on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  15. "Donors". Our Lady's Hospice - Kalingalinga. Archived from the original on 19 February 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  16. Tembo, Mwizenge S. (2012). Satisfying Zambian Hunger for Culture: Social Change In The Global World. Xlibris. p. 433. ISBN 9781479702107.
  17. Koc, Mustafa (1999). For Hunger-proof Cities: Sustainable Urban Food Systems. IDRC. pp. 70–72. ISBN 9780889368828.
  18. Bales, Kevin; Soodalter, Ron (2010). "New Business Models". The Slave Next Door: Human Trafficking and Slavery in America Today, With a New Preface. U of California P. pp. 117–36. ISBN 9780520268661.
  19. Belles, Nita. "What Would Jesus Do?". In Our Backyard: A Christian Perspective on Human Trafficking in the United States. Xulon Press. pp. 24–46. ISBN 9781612159386.
  20. "Kalingalinga on the Ball FC". Africa On The Ball. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  21. "Monifieth man: 'I'm a lucky person it's time I gave something back'". Evening Telegraph. 10 December 2014. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  22. Moonda, Firdose (12 August 2013). "Wanyama shirt drives Kalingalinga FC towards much needed bus". ESPN FC. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.