Sarah Baartman District Municipality Explained

Sarah Baartman
Other Name:old: Cacadu
Settlement Type:District municipality
Seal Size:150x100px
Map Alt:Location in the Eastern Cape
Coordinates:-33.95°N 61°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:South Africa
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Eastern Cape
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Sarah Baartman District Municipality
Seat:Gqeberha
Parts Type:Local municipalities
P1:Dr Beyers Naudé
P2:Blue Crane Route
P3:Makana
P4:Ndlambe
P5:Sundays River Valley
P6:Kouga
P7:Kou-Kamma
Government Footnotes:[1]
Government Type:Municipal council
Leader Party:ANC
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Khunjuzwa Eunice Kekana
Area Total Km2:58194
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:450584
Population As Of:2011
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Racial makeup
Demographics1 Info1:53.3%
Demographics1 Info2:34.9%
Demographics1 Info3:0.3%
Demographics1 Info4:10.9%
Demographics Type2:First languages
Demographics2 Footnotes:[3]
Demographics2 Info1:45.4%
Demographics2 Info2:45.1%
Demographics2 Info3:6.5%
Demographics2 Info4:%
Demographics2 Info5:3%
Timezone1:SAST
Utc Offset1:+2
Blank Name Sec1:Municipal code
Blank Info Sec1:DC10

The Sarah Baartman District Municipality (Xhosa: uMasipala weSithili sase Sarah Baartman; Afrikaans: Sarah Baartman-distriksmunisipaliteit), formerly the Cacadu District Municipality, is situated in the western part of the Eastern Cape province of South Africa, covering an area of 58,242 square kilometres. The area of the district municipality includes seven local municipalities. The seat is the city of Gqeberha, although Gqeberha is not itself in the district (it is in the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality). As of 2011, the languages most spoken among the 388,201 inhabitants were Xhosa and Afrikaans. The district code is DC10.

The municipality is a multi-ethnic administration, formed by the African National Congress government through the merging of the predominantly Afrikaans-speaking western part of the Eastern Cape, together with Xhosa areas near the Fish River, and the English district of Albany (with its own distinctive local culture, dating back to the 1820 settlers).

The name Cacadu is regarded by the Xhosa as covering the entire area of the district municipality, but in fact it is taken from a river that runs entirely in Gqeberha. Cacadu, meaning "bulrush water", is the Xhosa form of the Khoekhoe name of the river. The Dutch name is a translation: Papenkuils (in Afrikaans a bulrush is called a papkuil). The river rises in the Parsons Vlei and runs to the sea close to the Gqeberha industrial suburb of Deal Party.

In 2015, the municipality was renamed for Saartjie "Sarah" Baartman (1789–1815), a Khoekhoe woman who was taken to London to perform at freak shows and after her death her remains were exhibited until 1974. The renaming is part of an effort to redress marginalisation of the Khoekhoe people.[4]

Government

The Executive Mayor of Sarah Baartman District Municipality is Khunjuzwa Eunice Kekana, and the Municipal Manager is Ted Pillay.

Geography

The Sarah Baartman district covers an area of in the southwestern part of the Eastern Cape province. It extends to the Great Fish River in the east and the Sneeuberge in the north. The metropolitan area around Gqeberha is excluded from the district, being in the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality.

The southwestern part of the district (west of Gqeberha) is marked by several ranges of mountains that run parallel to the sea, including the Baviaanskloof mountains, the Kouga mountains and the Tsitsikamma mountains. In the southeastern part (east of Port Elizabeth) is the Albany region around the city of Grahamstown. The northern interior of the district is the southeastern end of the Karoo.

To the west the district borders on the Garden Route and Central Karoo districts of the Western Cape; to the north it borders on the Pixley ka Seme district of the Northern Cape; and to the east it borders on the Chris Hani and Amathole districts of the Eastern Cape.

Sarah Baartman district is divided into nine local municipalities, as below:

Name Seat Population
(2011)
Area
(km2)
Density
(inhabitants/km2)
36,002 11,068 3.3
79,291 28,653 2.8
80,390 4,376 18.4
61,176 1,841 33.2
54,504 5,994 9.1
98,558 2,670 36.9
40,663 3,642 11.2
Total 450,584 58,243 7.7

After the municipal elections on 3 August 2016, the Camdeboo, Ikwezi and Baviaans municipalities were merged to form the new Dr Beyers Naudé Local Municipality, with its head offices in Graaff-Reinet. This merger resulted in there being seven local municipalities within the Sarah Baartman District.

Demographics

The following statistics are from the 2001 census.

LanguagePopulation%
190,003 48.94%
174,917 45.06%
English 20 806 5.36%
744 0.19%
596 0.15%
451 0.12%
192 0.05%
172 0.04%
127 0.03%
87 0.02%
80 0.02%
46 0.01%

Gender

GenderPopulation%
Female 202,295 52.11%
Male 185,906 47.89%

Ethnic group

Ethnic groupPopulation%
Black African 202,289 52.11%
Coloured 141,083 36.34%
White 44 110 11.36%
Indian/Asian 719 0.19%

Age

AgePopulation%
0–4 33 178 8.55%
5–9 36 745 9.47%
10–14 40 809 10.51%
15–19 41 052 10.57%
20–24 33 222 8.56%
25–29 32 096 8.27%
30–34 29 929 7.71%
35–39 27 840 7.17%
40–44 24 208 6.24%
45–49 20 483 5.28%
50–54 16 494 4.25%
55–59 13 289 3.42%
60-64 12 928 3.33%
65–69 9 218 2.37%
70–74 6 764 1.74%
75–79 4 447 1.15%
80–84 3 276 0.84%
85–89 1 325 0.34%
90–94 680 0.18%
95–99 154 0.04%
100 plus 64 0.02%

Politics

Election results

Election results for Cacadu in the South African general election, 2004.

PartyVotes%
116,320 72.07%
27 615 17.11%
3 768 2.33%
3 694 2.29%
2 755 1.71%
2 416 1.50%
1 687 1.05%
999 0.62%
492 0.30%
277 0.17%
222 0.14%
201 0.12%
168 0.10%
160 0.10%
144 0.09%
113 0.07%
99 0.06%
82 0.05%
75 0.05%
69 0.04%
43 0.03%
Total 161,399 100.00%

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Contact list: Executive Mayors . Government Communication & Information System . 22 February 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100714013749/http://www.gcis.gov.za/gcis/gcis_list.jsp?id=14&heading=Executive%20Mayors . 14 July 2010 .
  2. Web site: Statistics by place . Statistics South Africa . 27 September 2015.
  3. Web site: Statistics by place . Statistics South Africa . 27 September 2015.
  4. News: E Cape municipality named after Sarah Baartman . 24 September 2015 . SABC . 6 August 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160822214829/http://www.sabc.co.za/news/a/111d1d0049f768e5b87cfba53d9712f0/E-Cape-municipality-named-after-Sarah-Baartman-20150924 . 22 August 2016 .