"Apartheid" Invoked in Clean Beach Dispute

by Jordan Yerman | May 16, 2008 at 08:21 am
358 views | 5 Recommendations | 3 comments

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Kids playing at the beach in Durban South Africa

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Kids playing at the beach in Durban South Africa

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Durban

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"Apartheid" is a hot-button word, sort of like "Nazi". In this case, it's being brought to bear somewhat inapplicably in this case: eThekwini(the South African municipality that includes Durban) municipal manager Mike Sutcliffe is most displeased that some of its beaches are losing top-flight status due to pollutants in the water and sand.

This just distracts from the real issue, which is poop in the water, by invoking the spectre of Apartheid: nobody's being kept off of Durban's beaches, and invoking an emotional argument to a quantifiable problem is somewhat disingenuous.
"The Blue Flag team have, through their actions, created two categories of beaches, much like apartheid having black and white beaches. The majority of people here don't go to the Blue Flag beaches," Sutcliffe said at a briefing with the Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Thursday.

He was speaking on the controversy over sewage-related pollution on the Durban beachfront.

However, Andre Greef of the chamber's beachfront committee challenged this assertion, saying there were no racial restrictions limiting access to Blue Flag beaches.

He said the main issue was the perception that Durban was "not good enough" to comply with international standards.

Sutcliffe also refused to make a presentation on the Blue Flag controversy unless members of the media and opposition party councillors were ejected from the briefing.

Blue Flags are part of an international beach-quality accreditation scheme.

Four beaches in Durban were once rated world class, but they have lost their Blue Flag status, reportedly as a result of poor water and sand quality.

According to the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa, the organisation overseeing Blue Flag compliance in South Africa, tests on some beaches have shown levels of faeces in the water to be unacceptably high by both World Health Organisation and national standards.
The stink caused by the withdrawal of Blue Flag status -- the international eco-stamp of approval for pristine beach management -- from several of eThekwini's beaches is a pointed reminder that municipal manager Mike Sutcliffe takes criticism very badly.
I visited Durban a few years ago, and was surprised how clean the beaches were, considering the city centre ends right at the sand. The bluebottles, though, were another story...

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michelle.sundvick
michelle.sundvick
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:36 on May 16th, 2008

jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
ladigue_99

I visited this wonderful beach in 2005 and it was very well kept and clean, I hope that the blue flag will be brought back soon!

ladigue_99 has contributed a photo to this story.

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catchlightsa

This image near one of the areas blue flag beaches. I think blue flag beaches are crucial to the protection of the environment and help to promote environmental awareness.

catchlightsa has contributed a photo to this story.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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michelle.sundvick
First Flagged at 8:36 AM, May 16, 2008 by michelle.sundvick
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