Summary
The previous government failed me, and now this government is failing me too.
— Bahija J., a 75-year-old woman in Cape Town, September 21, 2022
Bahija J., 75, has been on the waiting list for state-subsidized housing for 40 years. Her rented house in Cape Town is moldy and damp, and her landlord has promised her hot water since 1996. She is afraid of dying alone in the house but does not want to end up in an “old age home.”
Bahija spent nearly half a century of her life under an apartheid regime, whose racial segregation policies denied the majority of today’s black African, coloured, and Indian/Asian older South Africans a decent education, decent work, and the ability to save for older age. Many were displaced as children or young people by the apartheid government’s forced removals to segregate people on the grounds of race. The cumulative impact of this racial discrimination when they were younger continues to affect them decades on.
In part to address this legacy of apartheid, the post-apartheid government adopted the 2004 Social Assistance Act, which provides for the Older Persons Grant, a non-contributory social security entitlement for people aged 60 and over, and the Grant-in-Aid for those requiring full-time care and support at home. The post-apartheid government also adopted the 2006 Older Persons Act, which enshrines the rights of older people. The act guarantees them the right to live in an environment that caters to their changing capacities and emphasizes community- and home-based care and support services. While the Older Persons Act enshrines the rights of all older people, the vast majority of those who are eligible for government-funded care and support services under the act, the Older Persons Grant, and the Grant-in-Aid, are black African, coloured, and Indian/Asian older people.
Nearly 30 years after the end of apartheid, however, current government policies are undermining the intended remedial impact of the Older Persons Act and are, in fact, compounding apartheid’s legacy. Despite the act’s stated aim, many older people who were displaced during apartheid still do not enjoy their right to live independently and within the community, with hundreds of thousands of older people unable to access the basic care and support services they are entitled to so they can live with dignity in their own homes and communities.
This report documents the experiences of 63 older people across Eastern Cape, Gauteng, and Western Cape provinces. Forty-one were black African, 13 coloured, 3 Indian/Asian, and 6 white. Forty-five were women and 18 were men. Sixty-one received the Older Persons Grant.
Human Rights Watch found that few of the older people interviewed for this report had access to basic care and support services.
Ben Zolile, 75, lives in River Park, Johannesburg, with health that he says goes “up and down.” He used to eat lunch each day at a service center for older people but now cannot make the trip due to bad knees. “No one comes to my house,” he said. “There are no other services that come to my home.”
There are a number of factors that contribute to the unavailability of services, including that the government sets its targets for how many older people should have access to services based on what the government can afford rather than what services older people need. The government has determined that 20 percent of “active vulnerable older persons” and 3 percent of “vulnerable frail older persons” should have access to services. Given what is known about the levels of chronic illness, disability, and dementia among older people, these targets are likely to be extremely low.
Other factors also limit the availability of services, including disparities in provincial plans to increase access to services; insufficient numbers of social workers; and a lack of coordination between government departments responsible for realizing the rights of older people. In addition, although the government contracts with non-profit organizations to deliver community- and home-based care and support services, overly prescriptive rules on the range of services and insufficient funding impede the organizations’ capacity to deliver those services.
The managers of service centers in the Eastern Cape, which are tasked with providing community- and home-based care and support services, told Human Rights Watch that government funding covered only 40 to 50 percent of their costs. In the Western Cape, one private non-profit service center has to charge older people an annual membership fee and monthly contributions for food to help cover their costs. “The Department of Social Development doesn’t give [us] the full budget,” the center manager said. “Older people must contribute themselves.”
These challenges are exacerbated by the government’s continued over-reliance on family members to provide home-based care and support, even in circumstances where they are unable or unwilling to do so.
For Thembisa Loyila, 70, who lives alone in Mdantsane, Eastern Cape, service delivery depends on whether you have children or not. “The government doesn’t have any responsibility for us,” she said. “As older people, we have to take care of each other. We only have ourselves.”
Older people who receive the Older Persons Grant may also be eligible for a social security entitlement to cover the costs of full-time home-based care and support. The Grant-in-Aid is, however, woefully inadequate as it only provides 20 hours of full-time care and support per month, based on a caregiver receiving the national minimum wage.
Private care and support services are available but unaffordable for all but the very wealthy, exacerbating existing inequalities. Rates for 24-hour live-in care for one month can equal four years’ worth of the Grant-in-Aid.
In addition, Human Rights Watch found, few older people even know the Grant-in-Aid exists. For example, Ben Movenda, a 76-year-old man who uses a wheelchair, had not heard of the Grant-in-Aid. Instead, he has to rely on help from his neighbors to use the communal toilet and enter or leave the shack where he lives in Alexandra, Johannesburg. There are high steps and no ramps, the road surface is uneven, and he does not have the upper body strength to wheel himself. “I’ve got no support,” he said. “I need someone to help me, but who is going to pay for that?” And of those who do know about the Grant-in-Aid, some wrongly think they are not eligible.
The subsequent lack of home-based services negatively impacts older people’s physical well-being and safety and may impede their dignity, autonomy, and independence. Without appropriate care and support, older people may have no option to continue living independently in the community, which can cause profound distress of being institutionalized against their wishes. According to Nosiphiwo Tetana, manager of the Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center for older people, “Older people are just literally left on their own.”
Some older people who are left without needed support and services may even be at greater risk of violence and abuse. A government-employed social worker told Human Rights Watch that older people are exposed to various dangers when they are isolated and not getting the home-based care and support they are entitled to:
They’re raped, killed, there’s gender-based violence. When we get a case, we try to do something, for example, remove them to a neighbor’s house or find someone who can assist…. It can take months to find somewhere, and you only get a bed [in an old age home] when someone [there] dies.
Adequate housing is necessary to live independently and within the community. Yet Human Rights Watch found that housing could be unaffordable, unhabitable, and/or inaccessible for older people. Some older people have waited decades for state-subsidized housing. Others feel unsafe in their homes. Sylvia Lusiti, 72, is blind and has lived alone in a government-provided house in Dimbaza since 2016. Her house has no fence or burglar bars. “There’s no security,” she said. “At midnight, people knock at the windows, at the doors.”
South Africa’s democratic government has introduced a promising legal framework to protect the rights of older people, including those enshrined in the 1996 constitution, the Social Assistance Act, and the Older Persons Act. The Older Persons Grant is an important pillar of South Africa’s social security system, on which the country spends a relatively large portion of its gross domestic product (GDP) compared to other upper-middle income countries. Despite this promising framework, Human Rights Watch found that the vast majority of eligible older people are unable to access the basic care and support services they are entitled to, and that the South African government has failed to respect, protect, and fulfill older people’s right to live independently and within the community.
South Africa is obligated under international human rights law to ensure that all older people have an adequate standard of living, including adequate housing. This right must be guaranteed without discrimination. The right to adequate housing also encompasses the right of older people to live independently in the community, and access to care and support services has been recognized as essential to the full enjoyment of this right. The government has a specific obligation to ensure that older people with disabilities, including those with limited mobility and those requiring support with daily activities, can live independently in the community and that they have access to community- and home-based support services and adequate housing. South Africa’s national laws, including its constitution, also guarantee these rights for all older people.
To increase access to these services, the Department of Social Development should put in place a system to determine the number of older people who require community- and home-based care and support. It should urgently review the current funding model for these services and allocate sufficient funding to ensure that those entitled to such services have access. This should include adequate funding to non-profit organizations and public service providers so they can effectively deliver the support older people require.
The government should also review and reassess whether the Grant-in-Aid is sufficient to guarantee older people the resources necessary to access adequate care and support to live independently and within the community, and develop a public plan of action to increase as expeditiously as possible the level of the grant to cover the full costs of such services. The government should also provide accurate, accessible information to older people about the existence of the Grant-in-Aid and its criteria for eligibility.
National and Provincial Departments of Social Development should improve coordination and collaboration between government departments, as well as among the Department of Health, non-profit organizations, and other service providers, to improve implementation of the Older Persons Act and older people’s access to services they are entitled to.
Taking these steps is necessary for South Africa to satisfy its obligations under international and national laws and to address the legacy and cumulative impact of apartheid on many older people.
Recommendations
To the National Department of Social Development
- Fulfill the human rights and statutory obligations of the state to deliver quality care and support services for older people regardless of their ability to pay. To this purpose, the National Department of Social Development should:
- Urgently develop its capacity to deliver community- and home-based care and support services effectively;
- Establish and implement a system to determine and make public the number of older people who require community-based care and support services;
- Establish ongoing monitoring mechanisms to assess accurately the requirements of older persons;
- Ensure that provincial governments allocate sufficient funds to the delivery of community- and home-based care and support services, based on the number and needs of older people, to cover the full core costs of services envisaged under the Older Persons Act;
- Ensure that any private providers, including non-profit, non-commercial organizations, involved in the delivery of care services for older people are robustly regulated with clear guidance on ensuring non-discriminatory access and pricing, and that they receive sufficient funding to provide quality services to all without discrimination.
- Develop and implement a strategy to employ and train more social workers with the aim of reaching the numbers required to implement the Older Persons Act.
- Transparently review and assess whether the Grant-in-Aid and/or other social security mechanisms are sufficient to guarantee older people the resources necessary to access adequate care and support so that they can live independently and within the community.
- Publicly demonstrate how the government is using the maximum of its available resources to support the Grant-in-Aid and/or other social security mechanisms for the care and support of older persons, and develop a public plan outlining how the government will as expeditiously as possible increase the level to cover the full costs to ensure all older people can access adequate care and support to live independently and within the community.
- Provide accurate information to older people and those who provide care and support to them about the Grant-in-Aid and its eligibility criteria.
- Improve coordination and collaboration with other government departments, including the Department of Health; non-profit organizations; and other service providers to ensure more effective implementation of the Older Persons Act.
To the Provincial Departments of Social Development
- Set the budget for community-based care and support services, including home-based services, based on an accurate determination of the number and requirements of older people.
- Apply for sufficient funding, based on the number and requirements of older people, for community-based care and support services from the Provincial Treasury as part of the allocation from the Provincial Equitable Share.
- Regulate any private providers, including non-profit, non-commercial organizations, involved in the delivery of care services for older people, with clear guidance on ensuring non-discriminatory access and pricing, and ensure that they receive sufficient funding to provide quality services to all without discrimination.
- Review and revise overly prescriptive rules attached to funds provided to non-profit service providers that restrict all discretion available to them and curtail their ability to provide services that realize the rights of older people in accordance with the Older Persons Act.
- Pay subsidies owed to non-profit organizations in a timely manner.
- Include an allocation for staff salaries in the subsidy for non-profit organizations, for caregivers, managers, cooks, cleaners, drivers, and others whose work is essential for effective service delivery.
- Ensure that the actual costs incurred by non-profit organizations and their staff to provide services under the act are fully covered and ensure that they do not lose money due to the department’s actions or omissions, including by providing back pay if the department is delayed in making payments.
- Improve coordination and collaboration with other government departments, including the Department of Health; non-profit organizations; and other service providers to ensure more effective implementation of the Older Persons Act.
- Actively seek, fund, and build the capacity of new service providers to better respond to older people’s right to community- and home-based care and support services.
To the Provincial Treasuries
- Allocate sufficient funding for community- and home-based care and support services, based on an accurate determination of the number and requirements of older people, as part of the Provincial Equitable Share.
To International Donors
- Support South Africa to generate adequate levels of resources to progressively achieve the realization of older people’s right to live independently and within the community.
- Provide funding for the development of community- and home-based care and support services for older people.
To the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
- Review and assess South Africa’s efforts to fulfill its obligations towards older people under article 18 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, including with regard to living independently and within the community, including adequate housing, and under article 22 of the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa in its next periodic report.
- Develop a set of guidelines for African states on the realization of the right to live independently and within the community.
Methodology
Human Rights Watch interviewed 63 older people between the ages of 60 and 85 in September and October 2022, and May 2023. We used 60 as the minimum age because the South African Older Persons Act applies to people 60 and older. The age listed for each interviewee is their age at the time of the interview.
In addition, Human Rights Watch interviewed seven non-profit service providers, three volunteer community organizers, one non-profit community caregiver, two family caregivers, and one government social worker. Human Rights Watch also consulted 45 South African researchers, academics, lawyers, non-profit service providers, human rights experts, and members of older people’s organizations and 2 international academics. We complemented our interviews by reviewing national legislation and reports produced by governments, academics, international bodies, and local groups.
All interviews with older people occurred in person in their homes or in community centers in three provinces: Eastern Cape, Gauteng, and Western Cape. Human Rights Watch chose these provinces to ensure that interviewees came from different demographic, economic, and geographic settings.
According to Statistics South Africa, Gauteng and Western Cape have the lowest poverty levels of the nine provinces at 33 and 35 percent respectively; Eastern Cape has the second highest at 71 percent.[1] Eastern Cape had the highest proportion in the country of older people, 11.5 percent in 2022, in its overall population; Gauteng’s population of older people, 8 percent, was below the national average.[2] Eastern Cape also had a high proportion, 79 percent, of older people in receipt of social grants in 2021; Western Cape had the lowest proportion at 57 percent.[3] Gauteng, the country’s economic hub, had the highest number of older people participating in the labor force at 15.5 percent in 2020; Eastern Cape had the lowest at 6 percent.[4] While the number of interviewees is not nationally representative, the findings from these three provinces give a strong indication of issues across the country.
In Eastern Cape province, interviews were conducted in the coastal town of East London, the rural village of Gwaba, Mdantsane township, and the town of Dimbaza. In Gauteng province, interviews took place in the Johannesburg suburb of River Park and the township of Alexandra. In Western Cape province, interviews took place in the Cape Town suburbs of Woodstock, Elsie’s River, Grassy Park, and Khayelitsha, a township on the Cape Flats; in Atlantis, an industrial satellite town; and in and around Porterville, a rural town. Human Rights Watch selected these places to ensure a diverse range of geographic settings and experiences since South African society is still predominantly stratified along former apartheid configurations of race.
Older people’s organizations, service centers, and others helped Human Rights Watch identify older people to interview. Criteria for interviewees were that they were aged 60 or over, in line with the definition of an older person in the Older Persons Act; living in the community and not in a residential care facility, often known in South Africa as “old age homes;” and eligible for government-funded home- and community-based care and support services provided for under the Act, should they require them. To be eligible for such services, older people need to be in receipt of the Older Persons Grant. Two older people interviewed did not receive the Older Persons Grant because their income was above the eligibility threshold.
This report refers to the main racial groups recognized by the South African government, which we write as: black African, coloured (a term that refers to Indigenous people and people deemed to be of mixed race in South Africa), Indian/Asian, and white.[5] The interviewees were racially diverse: 41 black African, 13 coloured, 3 Indian/Asian, and 6 white. Forty-five of the interviewees were women and 18 were men.
Interviews were conducted in English or in isiXhosa, isiZulu, Sepedi, or Sesotho with English interpretation. The researcher informed all interviewees about the purpose and voluntary nature of the interviews and the ways that Human Rights Watch would use the information. We obtained informed consent from all interviewees, gave them the opportunity to decline to answer specific questions or end the interview at any time, and took precautions to avoid re-traumatizing the older people interviewed for this report. Human Rights Watch gave no incentives or compensation to interviewees, although it provided them with snacks and covered transportation costs for those who traveled to community centers to be interviewed. We also provided information to interviewees who were unaware of social security entitlements they may be eligible for.
All interviews were one-on-one, when needed also with an interpreter, and they were generally conducted in private settings. Seven older people consented to being interviewed with others in the room: four interviews took place in the presence of a family member and three in the presence of other older people.
To protect interviewees’ privacy, Human Rights Watch has withheld some names. Older people’s real names are only used if the interviewee specifically agreed to allow us to use their name and Human Rights Watch deemed that no risk would follow the publication of their name. For those who did not want their name included, we created pseudonyms that are indicated by given names and surname initials that do not reflect their real names. Human Rights Watch has also omitted the names of some service providers at their request.
At the time of the interviews, the South African Rand (R) was worth US$0.05.
During April and May 2023, Human Rights Watch provided the National Department of Social Development and the Eastern Cape, Gauteng, and Western Cape Provincial Departments of Social Development with a summary of our findings and asked each body to respond to specific questions. The Western Cape department responded on May 23, 2023, and its views are reflected in the report. The other departments had not replied by time of publication. Human Rights Watch also contacted private care and support providers included in the report to check the accuracy of their online data. Human Rights Watch received no response to any of those requests.
I. Background
South Africa’s apartheid system, which lasted from 1948 to 1994, has left a legacy for all those who lived through it and those who were born after it. As a result of apartheid policies of racial segregation, including in education and employment,[6] most black African, coloured, and Indian/Asian people who are now over 60 did not have access to decent education and decent work, which limited their ability to save for older age. Many were displaced as children or young people, separated from their families when the apartheid government forcibly removed whole communities using legislation that systematized the segregation of people on the grounds of race.[7]
Today, extreme levels of inequality in income and wealth and high levels of poverty persist,[8] corruption is rife,[9] and violent crime continues to rise.[10] These factors all impact the delivery of services for older people, for which the Department of Social Development is responsible. The percentage of black African, coloured, and Indian/Asian older people on low incomes and therefore in receipt of the Older Persons Grant is significantly higher than for white older people.[11] This is a direct legacy of apartheid.
Demographics of Older People
In 2022, South Africa had approximately 5.59 million people aged 60 and older,
comprising 9.2 percent of the total population.[12] That means that nearly one-tenth of South
Africans spent at least half of their life under apartheid.
According to government statistics, older women comprise 61 percent of people aged 60 and older.[13] Black African people are disproportionately underrepresented in the older population: they are 81 percent of the total population but only 62 percent of those aged 60 and older.[14] In 2020, 34 percent of older people were not functionally literate,[15] and 55 percent had chronic illnesses compared to only 10 percent of the overall population.[16] Over half, 58 percent, of those aged 75 and older were living with disabilities in 2016.[17]
Economic Situation in South Africa
According to the World Bank, South Africa is the most unequal country in the world.[18] Although racial differences are the biggest contributing factor to income inequality, gender also plays a significant role, with women earning 38 percent less than men.[19]
In recent years, South Africa’s economy suffered because of the Covid-19 pandemic. South Africa experienced a 6.4 percent real decline in GDP in 2020.[20] A 2020 Gallup survey found that 55 percent of workers stopped working at least temporarily during the second half of the year,[21] and by November 2022, the general unemployment rate was 33.9 percent.[22]
Furthermore, South Africa, like other countries affected by the global cost-of-living crisis, saw significant price rises, with the annual food inflation rate at 12 percent in September 2022 and the annual bread and cereal inflation rate at 19 percent, a 13-year-high.[23] The cost of a 750 milliliter bottle of cooking oil rose 30 percent from R31 (US$1.7) in September 2021 to R41 (US$2.3) in September 2022.[24] Despite severe disruptions to electricity supplies, known as “loadshedding,”[25] electricity prices also rose, including because the national power provider raised electricity tariffs by just under 10 percent in the fiscal year 2023 (FY23).[26] Transportation costs increased by nearly 20 percent year-on-year in September 2022.[27] All these increases have particularly strained low, fixed incomes, which the majority of older people live on, with almost 75 percent receiving financial social security entitlements, known as “social grants” in South Africa, that are conditional on a low income.[28]
South Africa has an extensive social security system funded through general taxation,[29] and on which the country spends a relatively large portion of its GDP compared to other upper-middle income countries.[30] At the end of 2022, nearly 19 million social grants reached almost 12 million people every month.[31] The Older Persons Grant, also known as the Old Age Grant, is a means-tested social security entitlement funded by the National Department of Social Development and administered by the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA).[32] The National Department of Social Development’s estimated budget for FY23 for all household financial social security entitlements was R253 billion (US$13 billion), of which the Older Persons Grant was R99 billion (US$5 billion),[33] with approximately 4 million recipients.[34] In October 2022, at the time of Human Rights Watch’s interviews with older people, the grant was R1,990 (US$108) per month for people aged 60 to 74, and R2,010 (US$109) per month for those 75 and older.[35] In February 2023, the National Treasury announced increases of R90 (US$5) and R10 (US$0.50) per month in April 2023 and October 2023 respectively.[36]
Because the majority of older people could not access a decent education or decent work for at least half their lives under apartheid, and therefore faced restrictions to save for older age, 87 percent of black African, 81 percent of coloured, and 58 percent of Indian/Asian older people received means-tested social security entitlements in 2020, compared to only 30 percent of white older people.[37]
Work opportunities are critical to improve the economic situation of those on low incomes. Despite that, in 2020, only 12 percent of all older people participated in the labor force: 20 percent of white, 11 percent of coloured, 10 percent of black African, and 9 percent of Indian/Asian older people.[38] These low figures may be explained by the fact that, despite constitutional protections against age discrimination in employment and no mandatory retirement age,[39] 60 (or 65 at the latest) is considered the normal retirement age and can be written into employment contracts.[40] In addition, with youth unemployment at 66.5 percent in June 2022,[41] the government has an Employment Tax Incentive (ETI) which encourages employment of people aged 18 to 29.[42] In 2020, 52 percent of older people lived in a household without an employed adult.[43]
Government’s Responsibilities to Older People
The duty to provide care and support services for older people lies with the Department of Social Development, whose mission is to “transform society … through the provision of integrated, comprehensive and sustainable social development services.”[44] The 2006 Older Persons Act is among the parliamentary acts that constitute the legal framework for the department.[45]
Service delivery is decentralized. At the national level, the Department of Social Development is responsible for reforming laws, developing policies, setting norms and standards, running the Older Persons Active Ageing Campaign, and funding the Older Persons Grant. At time of writing, the department had put out for consultation a draft national strategy on ageing for 2022-2027.[46]
Meanwhile, Provincial Departments of Social Development are responsible for the delivery of community- and home-based care and support services under the Older Persons Act in their province. The national regulations on implementing the Older Persons Act specify three categories of service centers. Category A service centers must provide two primary services, such as lunch and physical activity, and have minimal facility and staff requirements. Category B service centers must provide three or more primary services and have more facility and staff requirements. Finally, Category C service centers must provide six primary care services and as many secondary services as possible and have even greater staff and facility requirements.[47]
Provincial governments set the budget and priorities for social development spending, including for services for older people. Provincial treasuries allocate the budget for the Department of Social Development from the Provincial Equitable Share, a system by which national, provincial, and local governments receive an unconditional equitable share of national revenue to carry out their functions and provide basic services.[48]
Provincial departments use part of this budget to subsidize non-profit organizations to fulfill the government’s duties under the Older Persons Act to deliver community- and home-based care and support services.
The Gauteng Department of Social Development plans to shift from this model. In a consultation with non-profit organizations in September 2022, the Gauteng department expressed its aim to reduce the over-reliance on non-profits to deliver services by building state capacity to provide necessary services instead.[49] According to the department, non-profit organizations cannot respond to the scale of needs and the current partnership model is unsustainable because resources are going to non-profits at the expense of developing state capacity.[50] The Western Cape Department of Social Development told Human Rights Watch that it has not identified any need to take over services from non-profits, and it does not have the capacity to render more services directly itself.[51]
Older people who receive the Older Persons Grant and require support with their day-to-day activities are eligible for the Grant-in-Aid, a monthly social grant of R500 (US$27) to pay someone for full-time care and support at home.[52] Older people who require some, or part-time, support are not eligible. The Grant-in-Aid is only available to eligible people who receive two other social security entitlements, the Disability Grant and the War Veterans Grant.[53] As with the Older Persons Grant, it is also funded by the National Department of Social Development and administered by the South African Social Security Agency. The National Department of Social Development’s estimated budget for FY23 for the Grant-in-Aid was R2.1 billion (US$1 million),[54] with approximately 370,000 recipients.[55] In September 2022, at the time of Human Rights Watch’s first interviews with older people, the grant was R480 (US$26).[56] In February 2023, the National Treasury announced increases of R20 (US$1) and R10 (US$0.50) per month in April 2023 and October 2023 respectively.[57]
The Department of Social Development also employs social workers. However, according to the Minister for Social Development, as of March 2022, there was a shortage of 52,000 social workers across the country, including an additional 3,000 necessary[58] to implement the Older Persons Act.[59] The lack of social workers, according to the minister, was due to budget constraints.[60]
All state bodies providing services for older people are supposed to be engaged in executing the Older Persons Act in an integrated way,[61] but their efforts can be uncoordinated. A 2018 survey of service centers for older people subsidized by the Eastern Cape Department for Social Development found that only 1 out of 25 service centers surveyed were affiliated with the provincial health department.[62] Amendments to the act tabled in 2022, but not yet adopted at time of writing, attempt to address this current lack of coordination between the Department of Social Development and others involved in its implementation.[63] To improve coordination, the Western Cape Department of Social Development established an Older Persons Reference Group that meets quarterly and is comprised of various departments, including the Department of Health, and non-profit organizations. It also funds the Western Cape Older Persons Forum, which advocates for the rights of older people.[64]
The Department of Health is responsible for community-based health services, but these have focused on South Africa’s disease burden priorities and have not included social care and support for older people.[65] At time of writing, the Department of Health was developing a strategy on ageing and health for 2022-2027, the initial draft of which included collaborations with the Department of Social Development on community- and home-based care and services.[66]
Corruption
Although not the main focus of this report, the loss of funding due to corruption has impacted the ability of both government and non-profit organizations to deliver services effectively. The Department of Public Service and Administration is responsible for establishing anti-corruption norms and standards.[67]
There have been several inquiries into corruption in South Africa, including the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture, also known as the Zondo Commission.[68] In June 2022, the commission estimated that about R57 billion (US$3 billion) spent by the state had been “tainted” by state capture, namely the redirection of state resources for personal or corporate gain, during former President Jacob Zuma’s tenure in 2009-2018.[69] In September 2022, the Special Investigating Unit said it had evidence that former National Lotteries Commission board members and senior executives had corruptly taken approximately R526 million (US$28.5 million) in lottery funds and that they were investigating a further R906 million (US$50 million).[70] The National Lotteries Commission is a funder for non-profit organizations, including those that deliver services to older people.[71]
Furthermore, corruption related to the South African Social Security Agency grants is of particular concern for older people. Between 2012 and 2022, 1,174 people, including 761 officials, were investigated for unduly benefiting from the social grant system, at an estimated loss of R537 million (US$29 million).[72]
While the impact that corruption has had on the availability of services and support for older people remains unclear, the findings of these investigations give reason for concern that government resources for older people are being lost to corruption.
Crime
There is no national data on the prevalence of violence, abuse, and neglect of older people in South Africa.[73] However, rates were high in one small localized 2014 study on elder abuse,[74] with 64 percent of older men and 60 percent of older women reporting abuse in Mafikeng, North West province.[75] A 2021-2022 survey found that older people were more likely than the general population to be affected by consumer fraud, robbery, and personal theft.[76] According to a 2019-2020 survey, households headed by older people were as likely as other households to be the victim of household crimes, such as housebreaking and burglary.[77] A further 2019 study found that homicides of those 60 and older mainly occurred in a house, during the week and daytime, while homicides of younger people tended to happen in public spaces, during the weekend and at night.[78] Thus, older people isolated in their communities without access to care and support services may be at greater risk of crime.
These findings remain pertinent as crime rates, including sexual and gender-based violence,[79] continue to rise.[80]
II. The Right to Live Independently and Within the Community
There are always new problems with the lack of 24-hour assistance. There’s no structure, no programs. Older people are just literally left on their own.
— Nosiphiwo Tetana, service center manager in Eastern Cape, September 28, 2022[81]
The Older Persons Act of 2006 enshrines the right of all older people to “live in an environment catering for his or her changing capacities”[82] and aims to “shift the emphasis from institutional care to community-based care.”[83] In doing so, the act attempts to address an apartheid legacy; namely, the emphasis on residential facilities to provide care and support for older people.
Under apartheid, social services were segregated by race, with far better services available to white people.[84] Although white people comprised an estimated 16 percent of the population in South Africa in 1980,[85] a year later there were 426 old age homes for white older people, 15 for black African older people, and 2 for Indian/Asian older people.[86] In 1982, 11 percent of white people aged 65 or older were reported to be living in state-run, state-subsidized, or private residential care facilities, which was reported to be the highest percentage of older people living in residential facilities in the world at the time.[87] A small number of white older people, therefore, had access to a comparatively large number of facilities, while black African, coloured, and Indian/Asian older people had access to virtually none.
In 2021, 27,623 older people, or 0.5 percent of the total population of older people, were living in the 417 residential facilities registered with the Department of Social Development.[88] Human Rights Watch has not been able to verify the number of unregistered facilities.
As noted above, the South African government established the Older Persons Act to provide a range of community- and home-based care and support services for those whose income falls below a certain level. Community-based care and support services under the act can include economic empowerment, recreational, and intergenerational activities; informational, educational, and counselling services, including on “HIV and AIDS, care for orphans, Alzheimer’s, dementia and basic emergency care;” spiritual, cultural, medical, civic, and social services; nutritious meals; skills-building for livelihoods; professional care and rehabilitation to ensure independent living; and integrated community care.[89]
For those grant recipients who are identified as “frail older people,”[90] the Older Persons Act also provides for home-based care and support services which are “a comprehensive range of integrated services,” professional or lay, that include hygiene and physical care; rehabilitation programs to support mobility, including assisted devices; respite care; informational, educational, and counselling services on ageing to family and community members; and free health care.[91]
Unavailability of Community-Based Care and Support Services
Although the goal of the Older Persons Act was intended to increase the provision of community-based care for older people, Human Rights Watch found that there are insufficient care and support services to realize the rights of older people in South Africa.
In large part, this is due to the government’s failure to set service provision targets based on an accurate assessment of the number of older people eligible for such services. Instead, the government sets targets based on the cost of services and the government’s budget, which inevitably means that these targets do not reflect the real numbers of eligible older people. Furthermore, although there is recognition that service levels are too low, there continues to be a lack of harmonization across provincial plans to increase access. Finally, the government allocates insufficient funding to non-profit organizations that are primarily responsible for providing community- and home-based services. Non-profit service providers are further constrained by the amount of their government-funded subsidy and other government restrictions.
Service Provision Targets Not Based on Scale of Needs
Exact data on how many older people in South Africa currently require care and support services is unavailable. In 2015, the World Health Organization estimated that 38 percent of those aged 65 to 74 in the country and 49 percent of those aged 75 and older required assistance with at least one activity of daily living: eating, bathing, dressing, getting in and out of bed, and/or using the toilet.[92]
In 2016, 35 percent of people aged 65 to 74 had disabilities, rising to 58 percent among people over 75 years.[93] In 2020, 56 percent of older people had one or more chronic illnesses.[94] There is no nationally representative data on dementia.[95] Alzheimer’s Disease International estimated a dementia prevalence rate in sub-Saharan Africa in 2015 ranging from 1 percent among older people aged 60 to 64 to 26 percent for those aged 90 and older.[96] A 2017 study of isiXhosa speakers in a low income rural region in South Africa found higher than expected levels for those aged 60 to 64, at 6 percent, rising to 20 percent for those aged 85 and older.[97]
The Department of Social Development’s target for community-based care and support services “due to affordability” is limited to 20 percent of “active vulnerable older persons,” defined as retired older people who can function independently, are still mobile and self-sufficient, and can perform daily tasks with ease, and 3 percent of “vulnerable frail older persons,” defined as older people whose “physical or mental condition renders them in need of 24-hour continuous care.”[98] Although there is no exact figure of how many older people require care and support services, it is believed to be significantly higher than the government’s current targets, given what is known about who requires assistance with activities of daily living and the levels of chronic illness, disability, and dementia among older people. While the South African Older Persons Forum told Human Rights Watch that the Department of Social Development considered the funding model that sets these targets to be outdated,[99] at time of writing the department had not responded to our request for information on how it set these targets.
Moreover, the department has not even met its already too low targets. In 2021, the Department of Social Development reported 1,713 registered community-based care and support providers that deliver services to 97,923 older people, 90 percent of which are subsidized by the government.[100] While there is no data on who requires care and support services, that figure is less than 3 percent of the 3.7 million older people who were receiving the Older Persons Grant at that time.[101]
The Western Cape Department of Social Development estimates that, based on poverty levels and other social issues, 60 percent of older people in the province require access to community-based services from one or more of the departments of social development, health, or human settlements.[102]
Sylvia Lusiti, 71, who is blind and visits a service center in Dimbaza, Eastern Cape, is aware that government funding is insufficient for the services that older people are entitled to. “The government says that it’s too much on their shoulders to care for us,” she said. “It’s the money that talks. Food needs money, broken taps and toilets need money. People have different mindsets, they have dementia. There are a lot of things that require money.”[103]
Lack of community-based services can affect older people’s mental well-being. Marhafungana Silwanyana, 75, said there were no services for older people, social workers, or community caregivers where he lives in Mdantsane, a township in Eastern Cape. He expressed feeling isolated and despondent at home all day:
We have nothing to do, just sitting in the house. Sometimes, I wish to go and see people, but I’m always not feeling well. The days are long and boring. It’s really quite bad. I didn’t think my life would be like this.[104]
As a result of the lack of adequate budget allocations, hundreds of thousands of older people are not able to access the basic care and support services they are entitled to so they can live in dignity and are denied their fundamental right to live independently within the community.
Disparities in Provincial Plans to Increase Access to Services
As noted earlier, provincial governments are responsible for providing support services to older people entitled to them. Some provincial governments have acknowledged the need to increase older people’s access to services. However, provincial plans are inconsistent, resulting in older people in some provinces having greater access to services and support than in others.
Themba Magqadaza, 80, felt older people were treated differently based on where they lived. “Being an elder in the Eastern Cape feels like I’m part of another country, not South Africa, as there is so much that other provinces are doing for older people but not here,” he said. “For example, they supplement with food parcels. We don’t get that privilege here.”[105]
Furthermore, even the largest planned increases would only cover a small proportion of those believed to be entitled to services.
The government has an obligation to progressively realize access to care and support services for older people and to move as expeditiously and effectively as possible toward meeting this obligation. At all times, the government should fulfill its obligations without discrimination. The government is required to take the necessary steps to achieve full enjoyment of the rights contained in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) “to the maximum of its available resources,” which still exists even in times of severe economic constraints. When the number of older people receiving support, or the funding for those support services, is projected to decline in the face of growing need, such retrogressive measures may violate South Africa’s international human rights obligations.
The Gauteng Department of Social Development has recognized that increases in life expectancy necessitate more services for older people.[106] In the fiscal year 2020 (FY20), when 51 percent of older people in Gauteng had chronic illnesses (or 618,000 people),[107] the number of older people accessing community-based care and support services was only 17,436, and projected to rise by 41 percent to 24,617 in FY23.[108] However, the annual budget for services for older people decreased by 7 percent, from R350 million (US$19 million) in FY20[109] to R326 (US$18 million) in FY23,[110] and the Gauteng Department of Social Development failed to meet its projected increase, with the number of older people accessing services only rising to 19,675.[111] What is more, the budget cuts would result in nearly 4,000 fewer older people accessing care and support services in FY23 than in the fiscal year 2022 (FY22).[112]
In April 2023, non-profit organizations protested against FY23 budget cuts across different sectors.[113] The following month, the Gauteng premier announced that the budget cuts would be reversed, and non-profits paid the same as in FY22.[114] At time of writing, a number of service centers for older people had not signed their FY23 Service Level Agreement with the department.[115]
The Eastern Cape Department of Social Development committed to increasing the number of older people accessing community-based care and support services by 34.5 percent from 14,872 in FY20 to 20,003 in FY23.[116] In 2020, 62.5 percent of older people in Eastern Cape had chronic illnesses (or 435,000 people).[117] However, despite the department’s commitment to increase access to services by 34.5 percent, it only increased its annual budget for such services by 16 percent from R186.6 million (US$10 million) in FY20 to R216 million (US$12 million) in FY23,[118] and the number of older people accessing services only rose by 392 (less than 3 percent) to 15,264.[119]
The Western Cape Department of Social Development recognized in 2020 that the growth in numbers of people older than 85 has implications for frail care and support services and emphasized community-based and alternative models to residential care.[120] At that time, 55 percent of people 60 and older in the Western Cape had chronic illnesses (or 390,000 people).[121] Despite this, the number of subsidies for older people receiving community- and home-based care and support services was projected to decline by more than 15 percent over three years, from 16,396 in FY20 to 13,887 in FY23.[122] Meanwhile, the annual budget for services for older people declined by 8 percent over this period, from R268.4 million (US$14.5 million) in FY20 to R246 million (US$13.5 million) in FY23.[123]
Reductions in subsidies to non-profit organizations have resulted in several service centers for older people closing down, mainly in rural areas.[124] The department told Human Rights Watch that its budget for community-based care and support services depended on how much it had left once it had met its contractual obligations to residential, and assisted and independent living facilities. In FY23 this was R196 million (US$10 million) and R5 million (US$254,000) respectively, leaving R34 million (US$1.7 million) for community-based care and support services. The department recognized that this amount was not adequate to provide for the care and support older people required, but its repeated attempts to secure more funding through the Medium Term Expenditure Framework, the process which facilitates budget planning, had been unsuccessful.[125]
Insufficient Funding to Non-Profit Organizations that Deliver Basic Services
The government of South Africa contracts with non-profit institutions to provide the services due to older people under the Older Persons Act. However, in 2010, the Free State High Court held that Department of Social Development’s subsidies paid to applicants providing statutory services to older people were substantially inadequate to meet older people’s needs.[126] Subsequent judgments in the same case found that when a provincial Department of Social Development enters into agreements with non-profit organizations to provide constitutionally and statutorily mandated services on its behalf, the department must fund the full core costs of services except where non-profits are able to raise funds from elsewhere.[127]
The National Planning Commission acknowledged in 2012 that government funding to non-profit organizations had steadily declined since 1994, reducing the range and quality of services while the need for those services has risen.[128] Retrogressions in the availability of basic services are a violation of human rights.
Nearly a decade later, the National Department of Social Development recognized that provincial governments had not increased subsidies in line with inflation, sometimes even reducing them.[129] They noted that spending on social services was unequal across provinces and called on Provincial Treasuries to increase their budget allocation to provincial Departments of Social Development. The National Department of Social Development also committed to progressively fund the reasonable core costs of services, including staff wages, by setting and monitoring minimum service funding standards for subsidies paid to non-profit organizations.[130] While Human Rights Watch received information that the Department of Social Development has compiled a costing report on the Older Persons Act, as amended,[131] at time of writing, the department had not responded to Human Rights Watch’s request for information on whether it had set minimum service funding standards or how it monitors provincial departments’ delivery of services.
A number of provincial governments have taken steps to increase their budgetary allocations for older persons. In 2022, the Eastern Cape Department of Social Development increased its subsidy to community-based service centers from R200 [US$11] to R250 [US$13.50] per older person per month. However, the new amount would still appear to be far too low. Nosisi Mayamo, 64, feels betrayed by the government. She said:
What hurts me the most is [that] I vote every time without fail. I always vote, but when the time comes to help us, they give [the Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center] R250 for me: my transport, food, and activities. In reality, it would last me two days. How can they expect [the center] to feed me for 31 days?[132]
Despite apparent recognition that the subsidy was too low, the increased rate still fails to meet current costs. Service center managers in Eastern Cape who spoke with Human Rights Watch said that this subsidy covered only 40 to 50 percent of their costs.[133] Nomalinge Mlindi, chair of the Imbumba Association for the Aged, said: “We’re struggling how to use the money as it’s too little for a service center.”[134] Nosiphiwo Tetana, manager of the Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center, said non-profit organizations hire out their service center premises for funerals and parties to generate funds, and apply for food donations from grocery stores. In an attempt to fully cover costs, the Dimbaza Society for the Aged has applied for National Lottery funding every year but has not received any since 2019.[135] In September 2022, the Special Investigating Unit had evidence of and was investigating a total of approximately R1,432 million (US$79 million) corruptly taken lottery funds.[136] According to Nosiphiwo Tetana, “the National Lottery funds are depleted.”[137]
The Western Cape Department of Social Development in 2022 subsidized Category A service centers at R118 (US$6.50) per older person per month, Category B at R186 (US$10) per older person per month, and Category C at R197 (US$10.50) per older person per month.[138] Human Rights Watch learned from service center managers in the Western Cape that these amounts do not cover the core costs of services older people are entitled to. As a result, service centers either have to reduce costs by reducing services or increase funding from other non-government sources.[139] One service center described having to charge older people an annual membership fee of R20 (US$1) plus R50 (US$2.50) per month for food to help cover their costs. “The Department of Social Development doesn’t give [us] the full budget. Older people must contribute themselves,” the center manager said.[140]
Similarly, in Gauteng in 2022, the Department of Social Development subsidized one service center in Soweto, Johannesburg, at R332 (US$17.50) per older person per month. Although this increases by 6 percent each year, Kidi Mofube, the service center manager, told Human Rights Watch that this only covers about 70 percent of their costs.[141]
As a result of the government’s failure to allocate sufficient funding to non-profit service providers, these institutions are unable to provide the care and support services the government has contracted with them to deliver. In other words, the government is neither providing the necessary level of services itself nor allocating sufficient funds to ensure that others can do so. As such it is not meeting its obligations to provide care and support so older people can live with dignity in their communities as guaranteed under the Older Persons Act.
Overly Prescriptive Rules on Non-Profit Service Provision
Every year, service centers apply for funding by submitting a business plan to the Department of Social Development stating how many older people are registered members at their centers. Subsequently, the centers enter into a service-level agreement with the Department of Social Development that funds services for the number of older people the department can afford, which may be fewer than registered at the beginning of the year.[142]
Inevitably, however, the number of people requiring care and support at a specific center fluctuates during the year, and service centers are often left with inadequate funding for the number of older people applying. The requirement to specify the exact number of beneficiaries of services instead of striking a balance between the need for robust regulation of private service providers and flexibility for service providers, puts a significant strain on both service centers and older people. In May 2023, Tetana said there were 15 older people on their waiting list and more who had made informal inquiries about joining the center.[143] “Every week, every month [older people] come and apply, and we have to turn them away as we can’t overload the budget,” Nosiphiwo Tetana, Manager of Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center, said.[144]
Budgetary concerns mean less access for older people like Rose Nduneni, 70, who wants to join Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center but was told the center was full. “They say they have a budget, they can’t afford any new members,” she said. “I have been trying to become a member since 2021.”[145]
The level of the subsidy, as well as overly prescriptive requirements regarding its allocation, can further limit the types of community-based care and support that service centers can provide. Departments of Social Development may have overly prescriptive rules that restrict how a service center spends the subsidy regardless of the particular requirements of the older people in its community. The Eastern Cape Department of Social Development, for example, prescribes how the R250 subsidy should be spent for FY23: 42 percent on food, 5 percent on personal health care, 13 percent on sports equipment and clothing, and 40 percent on administration.[146]
Several of the people interviewed by Human Rights Watch who had access to community-based service centers in Western Cape, Eastern Cape, and Gauteng provinces said that available activities were limited to daily meals, knitting and other crafts, massages from caregivers, and exercise and sports.[147]
These allocations do not reflect the range of services envisaged under the Older Persons Act, which also covers services such as professional care, rehabilitation, integrated community care, and development systems to ensure independent living of older people.[148] It also does not reflect the actual requirements of those being served by the center. As Nosiphiwo Tetana said: “At the provincial level, they don’t appreciate the uniqueness of this institution. They want us to fit into a template, a standardized way, not customized. The funding does not speak to the needs of this center.”[149]
Melumzi Sauka, deputy chair of the Imbumba Association for the Aged, said prescribed subsidy budget lines failed to cover staff costs. “It seems to me that [the Department of Social Development] doesn’t recognize the fact that there are employees that care for older people,” he said. “They tell managers to play around with the money [so] you have to pay [employees] from nutrition, from care [budget lines].”[150]
In addition, delays in payment of the subsidies can leave caregivers and other employees without payment. To avoid this, a couple of service center managers said that they had to increase membership fees, reduce the amount they pay employees, lend the center money, or pay out of their own pocket when the Department of Social Development is late paying the subsidies. Some centers, they said, are forced to close down. [151]
Over-Reliance on Family Care Providers
The Older Persons Act guarantees older people receiving community-based care and support services the right to “benefit from family and community care and protection in accordance with society’s system of cultural values.”[152] However, an over-reliance on family care excludes older people who do not have children or other family members who can provide support at home or who are unable, or choose not, to live with them.
Thembisa Loyila, 70, who lives alone in Mdantsane, Eastern Cape, said, “For older people, service delivery depends on if you have children or not. The government doesn’t have any responsibility for us. As older people, we have to take care of each other. We only have ourselves.”[153] Theresa Lee, 60, has children but had to move into a shared community-house for older people in Cape Town. “You can’t live with kids these days,” she said. “Children are not there for their parents. You’ve given your all for them. They say they have their family first.”[154]
Moreover, some older people do not want to ask their family for support. Elizabeth, 79, lives in a farm laborer’s house in Western Cape. She is diabetic, has high blood pressure, and “a dizziness in her head that never goes away.” Her niece visits her once a week to do the washing, cleaning, and cooking. Even though she does not expect payment, Elizabeth normally gives her something. “I don’t like to be dependent on other people,” she said. “I’d rather not ask for anything.”[155]
An over-reliance on family support also affects older people whose family caregiver goes out to work during the day.
Nozala Ndoyana, 84, lives with her youngest daughter, Pamela Nokuthembela Ndoyana, 47, in Gwaba village, 36 kilometers outside of East London. Pamela washes her mother and cooks her breakfast before leaving for work in East London. Due to her working hours and the time it takes to get to and from work on public transport, Pamela has to leave Nozala alone for up to 12 hours each day. Pamela constantly worries about her mother when she is at work. “Even though I make her food, she may not think to eat it, and go without food all day,” she said. Sometimes Nozala wanders away from their house. If the neighbors see her, they will assist her, but there is no one to be with her all day. Pamela is also worried about her mother’s safety at home in a community where everyone knows she is alone all day. “It is easy for an intruder to [come into the house and] maybe rape her.”[156]
Family caregivers, often younger women, are also affected by the lack of care and support services for older people.[157] Globally, women are more likely to provide care and support for family members with chronic illnesses, including for older people.[158] In South Africa, they may also have to take on responsibility for other family members the older person can no longer support. In addition, low marriage rates among younger black African women mean that many do not have a spouse to share the responsibilities and financial costs with.[159]
Pamela, Nozala’s daughter, does not have a personal life and cannot afford to socialize, financially and because she does not want to leave her mother alone any later at night. Her employment opportunities are also limited. “If I was offered a full-time job in a different province,” she said, “I couldn’t go. I couldn’t take the opportunity.”[160]
Challenges Related to Home-Based Services
Home-based services are essential for many older people to continue living in their homes, and the Older Persons Act specifically provides for these. However, many of those interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported that these services are often unavailable or unaffordable, which undermines older people’s right to live independently and deeply affects their well-being and safety.
Unavailability of Home-Based Services
Some older people Human Rights Watch interviewed in Western Cape,[161] Eastern Cape,[162] and Gauteng[163] said that no one came to check on or visit them or other older people at home in their communities.
Ben Zolile, 75, lives in River Park, Johannesburg. His health is “up and down,” and on the morning of the interview, his “head was spinning from the blood pressure.” He said:
I used to go to a place called Hope as they used to feed older people there and [give us food] to take home, but now my knees can’t carry me there. No one comes to my house. There are no other services that come to my home.[164]
Several factors contribute to the lack of home-based care and support services, including lack of coordination between government departments; inadequate government funding and subsidies, which affects staffing; and inadequate numbers of social workers.
There is often a lack of clarity as to who is responsible for providing in-home care in a particular area. In one case, a service center manager did not know if their center was allowed to provide home-based care and support services to older people who could not come to their center because another non-profit organization was already providing community-based healthcare services under the Department of Health in the area.[165] This lack of coordination between government departments impedes the delivery of home-based care and support services as provided for under the Older Persons Act.[166]
The government does not provide adequate funding for the service center staff who are necessary for home-based care and prescribed in the regulations governing implementation of the Older Persons Act, including home-based caregivers, social workers, service center managers, administrators, cooks, and drivers.[167] Melumzi Sauka, deputy chair of the Imbumba Association for the Aged, said that because he cannot pay for a cook, one of his caregivers has to do the cooking, reducing the time for caregiving.[168]
The Western Cape Department of Social Development told Human Rights Watch that service centers have to pay employees out of the subsidy from the department and that the department did not have sufficient resources to pay for salaried positions.[169]
Nosisi Mayamo, 64, was deeply concerned about the lack of adequate staff in the service center she attends and called for an increase in caregivers:
One caregiver is responsible for all of us here [at the service center] and has to go to homes; bring food, incontinence pants; wash, change the linen, and put those incontinence pants on them; and on the same day, come back [to the center] and continue with the program at the center. This is too much. On top of that, they don’t get paid. That gives me sleepless nights.[170]
A lack of state-funded drivers also impacts home-based services. One caregiver employed by a non-profit organization said: “We don’t have as wide a reach as we’d like as we don’t have enough transport. We’d like to reach more people than we do currently.”[171]
South Africa is plagued by a shortage of social workers, which has a negative impact on the availability of home-based care and support services. Although the Older Persons Act recognizes the role of social workers, in March 2022, the Minister for Social Development said 3,000 more social workers were needed to implement the Act.[172] The lack of social workers, according to the Minister, is due to budget constraints.[173] One social worker employed by the Department of Social Development said that the department typically either gives social workers an internship or a three-to-six month contract as the department does not have the funds to employ social workers for longer periods.
As noted above, the Department of Social Development does not provide funding for drivers, so anyone delivering in-home care typically has to take public transportation or drive themselves. This lack of transport can also affect service delivery. They said:
We have two vehicles, so you only have access to a vehicle once or twice a month. You try to prioritize an issue: child abuse and rape can get a vehicle. If there is a high-risk case with an older person, we may get priority. Sometimes there is no vehicle to go to some areas.[174]
Gladys Booi, 69, felt social workers had little interest in older people. “Social workers say they come [to our homes] once a month, [but] sometimes they don’t and even [when they do come], once is not enough. They don’t come as they don’t want to know.”[175]
Unaffordable Home-Based Services
In an attempt to get the services they require, some older people pay for home-based support themselves even when they are eligible for government services. Dinah Valentine, 61, had a stroke when she was 57 and had to stop working as a museum assistant in Porterville, Western Cape. Since then, she has paid a family friend R200 [US$11] per month to wash her clothes and bedding and cook for her twice a week. “If I have something nice, I give it to her: fruit, sugar, meat, potatoes,” she said. “R200 is very little.”[176]
Inadequate Grant-in-Aid
People over 60 whose monthly income falls under a certain threshold are eligible to receive the Older Persons Grant. In addition, those eligible for the Older Persons Grant and who require support with their day-to-day activities are eligible for the Grant-in-Aid, a monthly social grant to pay someone for full-time support at home.[177] In 2022, 283,771 older people, war veterans, and people with disabilities, who may also apply, received the grant.[178] This number was estimated to rise to 370,000 in 2023.[179]
In September 2022, the grant was R480 (US$26) per month,[180] and it increased to R500 (US$27) in April 2023.[181] This is a paltry amount: based on the 2023 national minimum wage of R25.42 per hour (US$1.32), R500 provides only 20 hours, less than one day of full-time care and support per month.[182] And there are additional costs associated with support that the Grant-in-Aid does not cover. For example, a pack of 14 large, adult, own brand (or store brand) incontinence pants from a drugstore chain cost R205 (US$11) in May 2023.[183] Thus, the cost of three incontinence pants per day for a month is R1,362 (US$71), nearly three times the entire Grant-in-Aid monthly allocation.
Privately provided home-based care and support services are available, but the costs are prohibitive and not affordable for all, exacerbating already existing inequalities. Rates can vary significantly. As illustrative examples of the costs of private services, in March 2023, one provider that published its rates on the internet, SA Nanny, charged R325 (US$17.50) for a nine-hour day shift and R8,000 (US$435) per month for a live-in caregiver,[184] equivalent to 16 months’ worth of the Grant-in-Aid. Another, CareChamp, started its rates at R552 (US$30) for an eight-hour day shift and charged R24,999 (US$1,360) per month for a live-in caregiver,[185] equivalent to four years’ worth of the Grant-in-Aid.
Florence Limekaya, 79, has lived for over 40 years in Helen Joseph Women’s Hostel, one of three single-sex hostels built by the apartheid government in 1971 and 1972 in Alexandra, Johannesburg, to control the movement of black migrant workers.[186] She has arthritis, which limits her mobility, but only recently heard about the Grant-in-Aid when the South Africa Social Security Agency distributed information pamphlets at the hostel. Limekaya successfully applied for the grant, which she uses to pay children who live in the hostel to go to the shops or fetch water for her. The grant is not enough to pay for more support. If she requires more support, her plan is to knock on her neighbor’s wall. “The only problem,” she said, “is that because the door is locked, there is no way in if I can’t stand up [to unlock the door].”[187]
Sylvia Lusiti, 72, is blind and lives alone. She gets the Grant-in-Aid, but it is not enough to pay someone to assist her for the whole month. Instead, she uses the money to pay someone to wash her clothes or to make repairs to her home.[188]
Human Rights Watch learned that few older people we interviewed, who could be eligible for the Grant-in-Aid, are aware of its existence. Ben Movenda, 76, uses a wheelchair and relies on help from his neighbors to use the communal toilet or enter or leave the shack[189] where he lives in Alexandra, Johannesburg. There are high steps and no ramps, the road surface is uneven, and he does not have the upper body strength to wheel himself. “I’ve got no support. I know nobody,” he said. “I need someone to help me, but who is going to pay for that?” He had not heard of the Grant-in-Aid until we interviewed him.[190]
Nozala Ndoyana, 84, lives with her youngest daughter, Pamela Nokuthembela Ndoyana, 47, who works in East London, 36 kilometers away from the village where they live. “If I could afford it,” Pamela said, “I would pay a caregiver to step in when I go to work.” The Older Persons Grant her mother gets is not enough to cover those costs and the family had not heard of the Grant-in-Aid. Pamela said they would apply for the grant. “But,” she said, “I don’t think I can find someone who can look after her for R500 a month.”[191]
Others had not applied for the Grant-in-Aid because they had incorrect information about the eligibility criteria. Esther M., 64, shares a bedroom with her 87-year-old mother in her daughter’s house in Cape Town. Esther said her daughter struggles to look after her and her mother, who sits in the house or backyard all day and cannot walk to the shops by herself. Because Esther heard that people who get the Older Persons Grant are ineligible for the Grant-in-Aid, she did not apply for the latter for her mother.[192] In fact, in order to qualify for the Grant-in-Aid, one must be on a Disability, War Veteran’s, or Older Persons Grant.[193]
Impact of Lack of Home-Based Services
The absence of home-based services has a negative impact on the ability of older people to live independently and can cause them significant distress. Some older people told Human Rights Watch that they did not wish to go into or were scared of dying in an old age home, and felt the conditions were bad in the old age homes they knew about.[194]
Boyce Msutu, 80, is a retired teacher who moved from a night shelter into a shared community house for older people managed by a non-profit organization in Cape Town, Western Cape. Care and support services are not available in the shared house. “When you are not able to care for yourself,” he said, “they take you to another place. I’d be very worried. I want to die here.”
According to the manager of a service center in Khayelitsha, in Western Cape province, because there are no home-based services in the township and families cannot afford the additional costs of a state-subsidized old age home, older people end up in unregistered old age homes that do not receive subsidies and are sub-standard in quality.[195]
The lack of home-based care and support can prevent older people’s participation in their communities and daily life. Nosiphiwo Tetana, manager of the Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center, said they provide caregivers to fill this gap. “Some older people can’t do everyday things like going to visit someone, going to the clinic, keeping up with their medication, collecting their Older Persons Grant, and paying their life insurance or burial policies.”
The lack of home-based services can also affect older people’s physical well-being and safety. One community-based caregiver employed by a non-profit organization in Eastern Cape said: “There are lots of older people who need support in the community who are not being served by us. We meet with community members and ask them to help them, to check in [on the older person] every now and then. Their health suffers the most.”[196]
According to a government-employed social worker, older people are exposed to various dangers when they are isolated and not getting the home-based care and support they are entitled to:
They’re raped, killed, there’s gender-based violence. When we get a case, we try to do something, for example, remove them to a neighbor’s house or find someone who can assist.… It can take months to find somewhere, and you only get a bed [in an old age home] when someone [there] dies.[197]
A large number of the older people interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they felt unsafe in their homes or were scared of crime, abuse, or drug use.[198]
One community-based caregiver said grandchildren were the biggest source of abuse of older people, some of whom were drug users. Staying one step ahead and keeping older people’s medication safe was one of the caregiver’s responsibilities. They said:
The grandchildren smoke it, they’ve found new ways. They take anything that is a pill. They don’t smoke it exclusively but mix it with whatever herbs they have to make their drugs stronger.[199]
Lack of Education Led to Low-Paying Jobs and No Savings for Older Age Apartheid has had life-long consequences. Many older people Human Rights Watch spoke to had worked in the informal sector and in low-paid and insecure jobs, including as factory workers,[200] domestic workers,[201] cleaners,[202] farm laborers,[203] or in construction. [204] As such, they were often left without access to workplace pensions or the ability to save for older age. Those unable to save for older age are significantly more likely to require the support services guaranteed by the Older Persons Act and more likely to suffer from inadequate government funding for those services. Themba Magqadaza, an 80-year-old black African man from Dimbaza, left school after two years, before learning to read or write. He worked in the mines for almost 30 years until ethnic violence between Zulu and Xhosa miners forced him to leave in the late 1980s without a pension. With the Older Persons Grant as his only income, he relies on a daily meal from a community service center to prevent him falling into greater debt than he already is with loansharks.[205] Hilda Sesing, an 82-year-old black African woman, never went to school. She moved from Mahikeng (previously Mafikeng) to live in Helen Joseph Women’s Hostel, Alexandra, Johannesburg. For many years, she cleaned and ironed for a white family. She still lives in the hostel. “Nobody from the government,” she said, “comes to the hostel to check on older people.”[206] When the apartheid government forcibly removed Rose Nduneni, a 70-year-old black African woman, to Dimbaza in 1969, there were no schools. The authorities started building the lower and middle schools in mid-1969, but there was no secondary school. When she finished primary school, she became a nanny; her brothers went to work in the mines. The Dimbaza Society for the Aged’s service center was unable to accept her as a member due to lack of funds.[207] |
Inadequate Housing
Affordable, accessible, safe, and habitable housing is essential for older people if they are to live independently and fully participate within the community.[208] In 2021, 70 percent of the total population owned their homes, 19 percent rented, and 12 percent occupied their homes rent-free.[209] Fifteen percent of those in metropolitan areas lived in informal dwellings.[210]
Although the Department of Human Settlements delivered 3.4 million housing units between 1994 and February 2022,[211] in 2021, the national housing backlog was estimated at 2.7 million homes.[212] Several older people said they have been waitlisted for state-subsidized housing for many years.[213] Elizabeth Kekana, 78, applied in Soweto in 1979 but had to move into rented accommodation in Alexandra 20 years later as she was still waiting to receive a house.[214] Ben Movenda, 76, has lived in a shack in Alexandra since 1982 for similar reasons. He put his name down for state-subsidized housing in 1986.[215] Florence Limekaya, 79, hoped to move out of the women’s hostel in Alexandra where she has lived since 1980 and spend her older age enjoying life in her own house. She applied for state-subsidized housing in 2004. “I never thought,” she said, “that I would stay in the hostel until this age.”[216]
Bahija J., 75, rents a house in Cape Town and has been on the waiting list for 40 years:
The previous government failed me, and now this government is failing me too. I haven’t been to check at the Civic Centre for more than two years. Everything stays the same.[217]
Nazeem Rakip, 60, has been living with his wife in one room in a disused hospital in Woodstock, Cape Town, for more than four years. The hospital, now known as Cissie Gool House, is one of two disused public buildings that have been occupied by Reclaim the City, a social movement campaigning for affordable housing in Cape Town’s city center. Nazeem originally applied for state-subsidized housing in 1984. He bought a house in 2000, losing his eligibility, but reapplied for state-subsidized housing when he lost his house after an accident at work. “I've now been on the list for 10 years. I wrote to the city; they told me I just need to wait.”[218]
Unaffordable Housing
Those who live on the Older Persons Grant may be unable to afford adequate housing. The Social Housing Act stipulates that rental for social housing should not exceed one third of a household’s monthly income, recognizing the need for affordable housing for people on low incomes.[219] Older people living on the Older Persons Grant fall within that low-income category. However, many of those interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they were unable to find any housing that was that low in price, and if they could, it was often of poor quality or far from city centers. This is due to a number of factors.
The abolition of rental controls on privately rented accommodation in 1999[220] and gentrification in places like Woodstock, Cape Town, have increased rents so much that some older people can no longer afford to stay in their hometowns.[221] Previously, only one third of Nazeem Rakip’s income went toward rent. “We could live with this,” he said. He now lives with his wife in one room in a disused public hospital in Woodstock, pushed out of the private rental market by rising rents. “We want accommodation within the city, not 50, 70 kilometers on the outskirts.”[222]
In September 2022, Ntombuana Mbelu, 82, rented a room in a shared house in East London, Eastern Cape, for R1,600 (US$87) per month (80 percent of her Older Persons Grant). There was running cold water and a communal toilet shared by everyone in the house. However, the house had lacked electricity for nine months because the landlord had not paid the electricity bill. Furthermore, Ntombuana’s room was damp, her ceiling leaked, and she used buckets to catch the drips when it rained. The backyard where she hung the laundry was strewn with rubbish and rubble.[223]
For others, the only affordable accommodation is in small outbuildings, known as “backrooms,” that people have built in their backyards.[224] Vusindaba Walaza, 81, lives on his own in a small backroom in his landlord’s backyard in River Park, Johannesburg, that costs R800 (US$43) per month (40 percent of his Older Persons Grant). The eight backrooms in the backyard share one communal toilet.[225]
Lack of Social Housing Options
Older people on low-to-middle incomes who cannot afford rental housing on the open market may qualify for social rental housing subsidized by the Department of Human Settlements.[226] Under the Social Housing Act, social housing institutions must provide this on an affordable basis[227] and give special priority to older people and people with disabilities.[228] Article 9 of the Constitution prohibits both direct and indirect discrimination on the basis of age.[229] The Social Housing Regulations prescribe that monthly rentals for social housing must be based on the operating costs of the rental unit and cannot exceed one third of the household’s monthly income.[230] Therefore, if the monthly rental exceeds R666 (US$35), one third of the value of the Older Persons Grant, an older person living solely on the grant will not qualify because their monthly income is too low.
Physically Inaccessible Housing
Physically inaccessible housing limits the ability of older people with disabilities or reduced mobility to live independently within the community and reinforces their marginalization and social exclusion.[231] Ben Movenda, 76, is a wheelchair user whose wife uses crutches. Since 1986, they have lived in a one-room shack in Alexandra with high steps to the door and no ramp, requiring him to rely on neighbors to carry him inside and outside his home. The communal toilet, which is shared by about 50 people, is also inaccessible for his wheelchair. On top of this, Movenda does not feel safe in his shack due to the prospect of it being destroyed. “A lot of people are staying in the shacks, and when they are burned, they have nowhere to sleep,” he said. “It happens a lot.”[232]
Lack of Physical Security
Physical security and safe housing are essential for older people if they are to live independently and fully participate within the community. Security or burglar bars are a common feature on house doors and windows in South Africa. Not having effective burglar bars can make older people feel unsafe, especially given the high crime rates.
Sylvia Lusiti, 72, is blind and has lived alone in a government house since 2016. Her house has no fence or burglar bars. “There’s no security,” she said. “At midnight, people knock at the windows, at the doors.”[233] Lesedi N., 79, cannot afford repairs to her roof, which drips when it rains; her water pump, which leaks; or burglar door, which is broken. She also cannot lock the door and said she “sleeps with God” in the absence of protection.[234]
Uninhabitable Living Conditions
Habitable housing is also essential for older people if they are to live independently and fully participate within the community. However, older people are often unable to afford the necessary repairs to make their houses habitable and to protect against the cold, damp, heat, rain, wind, and other threats to health.[235] Vuyiswa Vena, 75, lives on her own in Khayelitsha and is trying to save money to fix her roof, which she temporarily covered with her neighbors’ tarpaulin. Repair rates range from R1,500 (US$82) for labor plus the cost of materials to R7,800 (US$424) in total, equivalent to just under four months of her Older Persons Grant.[236]
Others, like Bahija J., 75, are at the mercy of their landlords. Bahija pays R2,000 (US$109) per month for a two-bedroom house in Woodstock in disrepair and without hot water. Her landlord has promised her hot water since 1996 when she moved in. “The house is in disarray, moldy, stuffy, leaking,” she said. “The landlord knows all about it. There is a housing tribunal, [but] I feel it’s on the landlord’s side. I went to try to make the landlord do repairs, but there’s nothing till now.”[237]
The living conditions for older people in government housing can also be inadequate. Gladys Booi, 69, has a leaky government-built house in Dimbaza. Even after she replastered it, her wardrobe is crumbling because of all the water. “It’s a free house, but it’s destroying what I have,” she said. “I’m not sure where the dignity is for older people if they have to live like this.”[238]
Hilda Sesing, 82, has her own room in Helen Joseph Women’s Hostel, in Alexandra, Johannesburg, but the bathrooms lack water and the gas stoves in the communal kitchen do not work because they were vandalized. She gets up at 4 a.m. every day to get water from an outside tap to wash and cook on an electric stove in her room before the scheduled electricity stoppages, also known as loadshedding, begin.[239]
Older People’s Recommendations to the Government
The older people interviewed by Human Rights Watch expressed different priorities. Some called on the government to support more social activities in their communities.[240] Some said the government should provide more old age homes, especially for older people being abused or without children, given the absence of home-based care.[241] Others prioritized home-based care, wanting the government to employ and train more home-based caregivers,[242] provide assistance for older people around the house,[243] and send social workers to visit older people at home to check on their well-being.[244]
Older people also told Human Rights Watch the government should provide more affordable housing for older people,[245] improve their living conditions,[246] and build more houses on empty land.[247] Gawabulla, 75, who lives in the operating theatre of a disused public hospital in Cape Town, said: “The government should have concentrated on building houses, and not just for older people.”[248]
III. South Africa’s Legal Obligations
South Africa’s Older Persons Act, adopted in 2006 in part to address the legacy of apartheid, enshrines the rights of older people to live in an environment that caters to their changing capacities and emphasizes community- and home-based care and support services. The Social Assistance Act provides an Older Persons Grant for those whose income falls below a certain level, and a Grant-in-Aid for those who require full-time home-based care. Despite this promising framework, however, Human Rights Watch’s research found that the vast majority of eligible older people are unable to access the basic care and support services they require, and that the South African government has failed to respect, protect, and fulfill older people’s right to live independently and within the community.
This failure is partly due to the Department of Social Development’s lack of adequate resources to ensure community- and home-based care and support services for all older people entitled to them; its failure to cover the full core costs of services provided by non-profit organizations contracted to deliver statutory services on the department’s behalf; and its imposition of restrictions on how funding can be spent, all of which negatively impact its human rights obligations to ensure access to community- and home-based care and support services.
Challenges also stem from disparities in provincial government plans to increase access to services, provincial governments’ failure to request sufficient funding from the national government to provide services based on an accurate assessment of the number and requirements of older people, insufficient numbers of social workers, and a lack of coordination between the health and social development departments.
Furthermore, home-based care and support services may be unavailable or unaffordable, and older people do not always know about the financial assistance provided by the Grant-in-Aid, all of which affects older people’s physical and mental well-being. The Grant-in-Aid itself is insufficient to pay someone to provide the 24-hour assistance it is there to cover. As a result, many older people do not have access to the care and support services they are entitled to so they can live with dignity in their own homes and communities.
Relevant International Human Rights Standards
The Right to Live Independently and Within the Community
International human rights instruments contain numerous provisions that are relevant to the rights of older people.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) recognizes the “inherent dignity” of all people and sets out the rights that are necessary for a life with dignity. Article 22 states that everyone has the right to social security and to the realization of “the economic, social and cultural rights indispensable for his dignity and the development of his personality.”[249] Furthermore, article 25 states that everyone has the right to an adequate standard of living “and the right to security in the event of… old age.”[250]
The right to social security; to an adequate standard of living, including adequate food, clothing, and housing; and to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, are also guaranteed in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), the fundamental international treaty governing socioeconomic rights.[251]
States have an obligation to ensure the right to an adequate standard of living, including housing, without discrimination.[252] The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights—the body of independent experts established to monitor the implementation by states of the ICESCR—has made clear that these rights apply to “everyone.”[253] Furthermore, as the UN independent expert on the enjoyment of all human rights by older persons (hereinafter “independent expert”) has stated, “the human rights to an adequate standard of living and to adequate housing apply regardless of age.”[254]
While the ICESCR recognizes that the full realization of the rights contained in the covenant may need to be achieved progressively, a state party has an obligation to take steps to “the maximum of its available resources” to achieve those rights.[255] The CESCR has stressed that “even in times of severe resource constraints the vulnerable members of society can and indeed must be protected by the adoption of relatively low-cost targeted programmes.”[256]
The right to housing has been defined by the CESCR as “the right to live somewhere in security, peace and dignity.”[257] That right also encompasses the right of older people to live independently in the community, which “derives from the right to an adequate standard of living and is interdependent with other rights.”[258] The independent expert has stated: “Older persons have an equal right with others to decide where to live and with whom, and not to be forced into a particular living arrangement. This right includes having the necessary means and support enabling them to make decisions and live their lives in accordance with their wills and preferences.”[259]
The CESCR has identified several factors that must be considered in determining the adequacy of housing, including accessibility and affordability.[260] The CESCR noted that disadvantaged groups, “such as the elderly”, “must be accorded full and sustainable access to adequate housing resources.”[261]
The independent expert concluded that states should improve the affordability of housing for older people, including by eliminating discrimination on the basis of age and other grounds in all housing-related laws, policies, and practices; providing housing adapted to the needs and rights of older people; and providing a range of care and support services that promote their dignity, autonomy, and independence and enable them to remain in their home.[262] The UN special rapporteur on adequate housing has also recognized physical security and a safe environment as elements of the right to adequate housing.[263]
Older persons with disabilities have the right to live independently in the community under article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities (CRPD), which South Africa ratified in 2017.[264] The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities—the body of independent experts that monitors compliance with the CRPD—has stated that article 19 includes having access to safe, adequate, and affordable housing and that “access to housing means having the option to live in the community on an equal basis with others.”[265]
With regard to the right to live independently in the community, the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has noted the prohibition of discriminatory practices such as the exclusion of individuals or groups from the provision of certain services, stating that “States parties should prohibit and prevent third parties from imposing practical or procedural barriers to living independently and being included in the community, for example by ensuring that services provided are in line with living independently in the community and that persons with disabilities are not denied the possibility to rent or are not disadvantaged in the housing market.”[266]
States that have ratified the CPRD are under an immediate obligation to repeal or reform policies, laws, and practices that prevent people with disabilities from securing affordable and accessible housing.[267]
The independent expert, observing that “older persons, especially those with disabilities, are often denied the right to live independently and to be included in the community,” has cautioned against forcibly placing older persons in institutions.[268] The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has emphasized that people with disabilities, including older persons with disabilities, should be able to “exercise choice and control over their lives and make all decisions concerning their lives.”[269] This right should apply to all older persons.
Support Services
Both the CESCR and the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities have stressed that access to care and support services is essential to the full enjoyment of the right to live independently in the community.
The CESCR has also stressed that “insofar as respect for the rights of older persons requires special measures to be taken, States parties are required by the Covenant to do so to the maximum of their available resources.”[270] With regard to persons with disabilities, the CESCR has stated that the right to an adequate standard of living in relation to article 11 of the ICESCR also includes the need to ensure that “‘support services, including assistive devices’ are available ‘for persons with disabilities, to assist them to increase their level of independence in their daily living and to exercise their rights’.”[271]
With regard to the exercise of autonomy and independence in relation to adequate housing, the independent expert has noted that some of the primary barriers for older persons include “the lack of adapted and diversified housing options, the lack or limited availability of care” and “social and/or support services at home and in the community.”[272] The independent expert observed that support services include “the provision of help or assistance to someone who requires it to carry out daily activities and participate in society. Such services are often not available or not affordable for older persons, especially those with disabilities.”[273]
Under article 19 (b) of the CRPD, states have an obligation to ensure that “persons with disabilities have access to a range of in-home, residential and other community support services, including personal assistance necessary to support living and inclusion in the community, and to prevent isolation or segregation from the community.”[274] These supports should be available to anyone with a disability on an equal basis, meaning the support should be provided without consideration of the level of support the person requires.[275]
The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has specifically addressed the over-reliance of some governments on support and care being provided solely by families. The committee has emphasized that persons with disabilities “must have the same degree of choice and control over their lives as other members of the community,”[276] and has noted that “often, persons with disabilities cannot exercise choice because there is a lack of options to choose from. This is the case, for instance, where informal support by the family is the only option, where support is unavailable outside of institutions, where housing is inaccessible, or support is not provided in the community.”[277] Furthermore, the committee has stressed that every state party must ensure a standardized minimum support level sufficient to allow the exercise of the right to live independently and be included in the community, which includes, among other things, development of a “concrete action plan for independent living for persons with disabilities within the community, taking steps toward facilitating formal supports for independent living within the community so that informal support by, for example, families is not the only option.”[278]
The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has also underscored that “individualized support services must be considered a right rather than a form of medical, social or charity care. For persons with disabilities, access to a range of individualized support services is a precondition for independent living within the community.”[279]
The independent expert has observed that the right of older persons to live independently includes “having the necessary means and support enabling them to make decisions and live their lives in accordance with their wills and preferences.”[280]
Relevant Regional and National Legal Standards
The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which South Africa ratified in 1996, provides that older people have the right to “special measures of protection in keeping with their physical or moral needs.”[281] Similarly, the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa (the Maputo Protocol), which South Africa ratified in 2004, guarantees “special protection” to older women, including in relation to their “physical, economic and social needs.”[282]
The South African Constitution guarantees older people’s rights to sufficient food and water and adequate housing.[283] It also guarantees non-discrimination on the basis of age and disability.[284] Section 27 of the constitution recognizes the right to social security, including the right to “appropriate social assistance.” In 2020, the Eastern Cape High Court found that home-based care and support services for older people are the type of social assistance envisaged by section 27 of the constitution and “not only assist the beneficiaries to survive but also to survive with dignity, in the exercise of their right to dignity.”[285]
The South African Older Persons Act, signed into law in 2006, provides for the right of all people 60 years of age and older to live in an environment that caters to their changing capacities.[286] The act “shift[s] the emphasis from institutional care to community-based care in order to ensure that an older person remains in his or her home within the community for as long as possible.”[287] The CRPD does not limit the provision of support services in the community with the qualifier “for as long as possible.”[288] As of November 2022, the South African Department of Social Development had tabled amendments to the Older Persons Act, including provisions for inter-governmental coordination of its implementation and support for older persons with disabilities and chronic illnesses.[289]
Under the Social Housing Act, the government and social housing institutions must give special priority to older people for social housing.[290]
Acknowledgments
This report was researched and written by Bridget Sleap, senior researcher on the rights of older people. Heather Barr, associate director in the Women’s Rights Division, provided support and guidance in conducting interviews. The report was edited by a senior editor and by the deputy director, Elizabeth Kamundia, in the Disability Rights Division. Fred Abraham, associate program director, and Holly Cartner, senior legal advisor, respectively provided programmatic and legal review.
The following Human Rights Watch staff provided specialist review: Noma Masiko-Mpaka, Ashwanee Budoo-Scholtz, and Allan Ngari, Africa Division; Lena Simet, Sylvain Aubry, and Aruna Kashyap, Economic Justice Rights; Kayum Ahmed, Health and Human Rights; Annerieke Smaak Daniel, Women’s Rights; and Graeme Reid, LGBT Rights.
Adriana Masgras, coordinator in the Disability Rights Division, gave production assistance and support. Layout and production were done by Rafael Jimenez, graphic designer; Travis Carr, publications officer; Jose Martinez, administrative officer; and Fitzroy Hepkins, senior administrative manager. Taurai Maduna, video editor/producer, filmed and produced the video accompanying this report.
The Samuel Centre for Social Connectedness (SCSC) and AARP generously supported this work. We offer our deepest thanks to SCSC for their unwavering partnership and to AARP for their steadfast commitment.
Most importantly, Human Rights Watch thanks the older people who courageously shared their personal stories and experiences for this report.