Service delivery protests must be completely eliminated by 2014,
Co-operative Governance Minister Sicelo Shiceka said on Wednesday.
"We must respond to issues before people go to the streets,"
Shiceka told a local government indaba in Boksburg, which included
municipal and provincial government representatives.
He wanted a "responsive, efficient, effective and accountable"
local government.
"We must be able to say by 2014 we are committed... to a clean
audit by all municipalities. We must reduce infrastructure backlogs
by 2014."
The indaba followed a wave of service delivery protests around
the country, many of which turned violent. Communities largely
called for the removal of councillors due to a track record of poor
service delivery.
On Tuesday President Jacob Zuma, speaking at a meeting in
Khayelitsha, condemned the violent nature of protests.
In his address Shiceka said politicians must ensure municipal
managers accounted for their performances.
A turn around strategy for local government would be formulated
by December, and from January to March next year, it must be
discussed and implemented at municipal level.
Shiceka was releasing a report on the state of local government
which highlighted a number of challenges, including electricity
backlogs and financial mismanagement.
According to the report 30 percent of the service delivery
protests between January to July this year occurred in Gauteng,
followed by 17 percent in the North West and 15 percent in the Free
State.
The report also indicates an "escalating loss of confidence in
governance", with protests increasing considerably in 2009 when
compared to the last six years.
"Relationships at the local level are tainted by... contestation
among the elite of local areas.
"A culture of patronage and nepotism is now so widespread in
many municipalities that the formal municipal accountability system
is ineffective and unacceptable to many citizens," the report read.