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Hundreds of Job Seekers Queue at the Riverclub

As the unemployment rate climbs in South Africa, job seekers gather in Cape Town in hopes of getting work with Amazon and the River Club.

GroundUp News by GroundUp News
2021-08-26 08:15
in News
Hundreds of Job Seekers Queue at the Riverclub

Hundreds of Job Seekers Queue at the Riverclub. Photo: Peter Luhanga

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The River Club in Cape Town called on all job seekers to hand in their details, as plans are set in motion for a huge redevelopment that will incorporate Amazon. The First Nations Collective supports the development but some associations still oppose it.

Hundreds of job seekers queued on Wednesday at the River Club in Observatory, Cape Town in the hope of a job in the controversial development, which is set to include giant online retailer Amazon.

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The job seekers said they heard from family members and social networking sites that a recruitment drive was taking place.

Figures from StatsSA released this week showed South Africa’s unemployment rate had climbed to 34.4% in the second quarter of the year, compared to 23.3% in the same period last year. Using the conventional method of measurement — taking into account only those seeking jobs and not those who have given up looking — the number of unemployed people climbed from 4.29 million to 7.8 million over the year.

At the River Club on Wednesday, volunteers from the Cape Khoi Labour Forum captured the job seekers’ details on their laptops in tents on the lawn.

The proposed R4.5 billion development has attracted fierce opposition from civic associations who believe it is inappropriate on land seen by many as the first site of colonial dispossession by the Dutch, where the Khoi were forced from their ancestral grazing lands. However the First Nations Collective supports the development.

Twenty-four-year-old Milan, who works in the tow truck industry, was among the job seekers. The father of a girl aged six, he says he wants to quit working in the tow truck industry as there is a lot of gang violence.

“There is a lot of … fighting over territory and stuff like that,” said Milan.

He says on Tuesday night his uncle informed him of the River Club redevelopment and possible work opportunities.

“I was excited. What came into my mind is to do something different and learn new things,” he said.

Another of the job seekers, Charnay Classen, 29, lives in Kalksteenfontein near Elsiesrivier. She is a single mother of three children, and has been unemployed since the Covid-19 pandemic started. She says she heard from her friend that there are work opportunities at the River Club and so she woke up very early on Wednesday and arrived at the club at 7am. She was still there at 2pm.

She says when she arrived, there were already long queues.

She says there is high unemployment in Kalksteenfontein. “This is an opportunity to get a job to be independent and have a stable income. I live with my parents.”

Cape Khoi Labour Forum member, Deon Samson, said the forum hoped to link people from poor communities to work opportunities. He said Wednesday’s exercise was not to offer jobs but to collect names of people who could potentially find work opportunities at the River Club redevelopment project.

Samson said by 7:05am on Wednesday he had already captured 300 people on the database and by 14:07pm there were 726 names.

By Peter Luhanga

Tags: AmazonCape TownRiver Club
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GroundUp is a news agency providing high-quality and ethical journalis. They report news that is in the public interest, with an emphasis on the human rights of vulnerable communities.GroundUP is independent and do not promote any political party.GroundUp started in April 2012 as a joint project of Community Media Trust and the University of Cape Town's Centre for Social Science Research.

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