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,Tanzania ,Tanzania participated in Habitat Jam Forum at TGDLC

Tanzania participated in Habitat Jam Forum at TGDLC
Improving lives of slum dwellers

Tens of thousands of people from all countries of the world and walks of life participated during the 72-hour event online Global Discussion. In Tanzania the participants aired their views at Tanzania Global Development and Learning Centre (TGDLC). The most aired challenge was on the changes can be made to dramatically and immediately improve the lives of the urban poor? Analyses NYASIGO KORNEL.

In the Habitat JAM forum, urban planners, financiers, builders, activists and grassroots organizations joined with ordinary people to create a genuine dialogue around urban poverty and its causes, and stimulate cooperation around infrastructure, shelters, living conditions, and more.

The third session of the World Urban Forum will discuss the theme "Sustainable Cities: Land, Housing and Infrastructure for All," looking at affordable housing and slum upgrading. The forum will feed into and influence the theme.

As one million people worldwide are moving into cities every week, the lack of infrastructure, proper shelter, affordable housing and decent living conditions (safety, food conservation, health prevention) is a situation that cities need to manage. The issues and the solutions must be heard loud and clear.

More than 900 million human beings live in slums in our cities around the world, and many of these citizens are working people simply not earning enough to afford decent living conditions.
Mrs. Anna Tibaijuka, Executive Director, UN Habitat was moved, in an exchange in the JAM on the question "why the habitat jam? JAMMING with participants from around the world, Mrs. Tibaijuka said this about the power and potential significance this events could have in driving decision making:

She writes in the report that we are quite right that the problem of slums will not be solved by research alone.

However, she said that she is informed that as of last Kenya had the second highest number of registrants participating in the Habitat Jam [today]. The fact that thousands have been willing to patiently wait in line sometimes for hours in order to be able to contribute to this debate has been a profoundly moving experience for me. The fact that the debate on slums has moved from the academic world to streets of cities such as Nairobi, Dakar, Cape Town, and Mumbai, Rio, Lima and Manilla is in and of itself a powerful signal to world leaders on the need for concerted action."


The worlds slums are growing, and growing, with the number people living in such dire conditions now at the 1 billion mark making up 32 per cent of the global urban population, according to UN-HABITATs new Global Report on Human Settlements 2003. The report published this month entitled, The Challenge of Slums, says the crisis is such that the world will see this figure double in the next 30 years unless a concerted effort is undertaken to alleviate the situation.
The locus of global poverty is moving to cities, a process now recognised as the urbanisation of poverty, says United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan in a foreword to the report. Without concerted action on the part of the municipal authorities, national governments, civil society actors and the international community, the number of slum dwellers is likely to increase in most developing countries. And if no serious action is taken, the number of slum dwellers worldwide is projected to rise over the next 30 years to about 2 billion.
In developing regions, slum dwellers account for 43 per cent of the population in contrast to about 6 per cent in more developed regions. In sub-Saharan Africa the proportion of urban residents in slums is highest at 71.9 per cent, according to the report. Oceania had the lowest at 24.1 per cent. South-central Asia accounted for 58 per cent, east Asia for 36.4 per cent, western Asia for 33.1 per cent, Latin America and the Caribbean for 31.9 per cent, north Africa for 28.2 per cent and southeast Asia for 28 per cent.
Although the concentration of slum dwellers is highest in African cities, in numbers alone, Asia accounts for some 60 per cent of the worlds urban slum residents.
The report, which runs into over 300 pages, is packed with new statistics and studies of a situation that has made governments the world over increasingly concerned to the point where they have adopted a specific clause Target 11 of Millennium Development Goal 7 to significantly improve the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers by the year 2020.
Slums represent the worst of urban poverty and inequality. Yet the world has the resources, know-how and power to reach the target established in the Millennium Declaration. It is my hope that this report, and the best practises it identifies, will enable all actors involved to overcome the apathy and lack of political will that have been a barrier to progress, and move ahead with greater determination and knowledge in our common effort to help the worlds slum dwellers to attain lives of dignity, prosperity and peace, says Mr. Annan.
The reports major concern is the growing challenge presented by this crisis. The worlds rural population has reached its peak, and almost all further population growth will be absorbed by urban settlements a critical situation recognised by very few governments, cities and other agencies.
UN-HABITAT is the agency tasked with implementing Target 11. As it increases emphasis on policy and operational support in scaling up slum upgrading projects and programmes, it is also providing direction to help national governments, municipal authorities, civil society and international organizations alleviate the conditions of the worlds poorest urban residents.

The views and ideas shared in the JAM will be identified and published in January 2006. This dialogue will form a significant part of the discussions at the World Urban Forum 3 in Vancouver, Canada, in June 2006


To Contact me:
Cell: +255 745 55 14 55
Email: emmakornel@yahoo.com

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Posted By: Nyasigo Kornel

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