Nearly
500 men and women gathered in Cardiff on Saturday to kick off the
17th Football Homeless World Cup. The opening match was won by
Denmark against Wales after a penalty shootout. The week-long
tournament
will see players from 48 countries compete in hundreds of games to
crowds of nearly 100,000 people. Organisers said they hoped to shift
public perceptions of homelessness and that support for players
included job training, housing support and health services.
Jon
Sparkes, head of homelessness charity Crisis, said such sporting
events were crucial "as they provide people with vital
opportunities to reconnect and come together as a team – all the
while boosting their skills and sense of empowerment".
For
22-year-old Mujahed, a refugee who fled ongoing civil war in Yemen
and undertook a perilous boat crossing on the Mediterranean, football
is a path towards social integration.
"Football
takes you away from your bad situation ... I have now a lot of
friends and a lot of people who care about me and I care about them
because we're all footballers."
Global
housing body Habitat for Humanity estimates about 1.6 billion people
lack adequate accommodation or live in substandard housing.
Despite
the sincerity and the well-meaning intentions of the players and their supporters, The South Wales
branch of the Socialist Party explains kicking a ball around a field
will not solve the crises in housing as the July issue of the
Socialist Standard explains:
“...The
housing market isn’t led by need, but by whatever practices are
likely to be most profitable for landlords and property
developers...”
The
market determines what is available and at what price — which means
that the capitalist class gets the housing they want and profits come
before the housing needs of the community. People on medium and lower
incomes have been priced out of the market, and end up unable to move
to better housing. Those with lower incomes, or who have debts, have
to rely on the often unreliable end of the private sector or
under-funded social housing. For homeless people, any type of long
term housing is hard to find. The extent of homelessness is often
used as a gauge for the state of the economy as a whole. In an
economic downturn, people are less able to hold down jobs, keep up
with payments on rent or other bills, or have savings they can fall
back on. Often, a combination of factors like these will push people
towards losing their homes. The housing market shows how the system
doesn’t work in our interests. Capitalism is a society of haves and
have-nots, of winners and losers. Homeless people are at the unlucky
end of the social scale. Many other people are only one wage packet
away from being drawn towards homelessness. So, to accept that
homelessness is just a part of life is to accept the capitalist
system which traps us all.
Engels
wrote, in the nineteenth century, of the housing crisis in these
terms:
“The
so-called housing shortage which plays such a great role in the press
nowadays, does not consist in the fact that the working-class
generally lives in bad, overcrowded and unhealthy dwelling. This
shortage is not something peculiar to the present, it is not even one
of the sufferings peculiar to the modern proletariat in
contradistinction to all earlier oppressed classes. On the contrary
all oppressed classes in all periods suffered rather uniformly from
it. To put an end to this housing shortage there is only one means:
to abolish altogether the exploitation and oppression of the working
class by the ruling class...The housing shortage from which the
working class suffers today is one of the many evils which result
from present-day capitalist production.”
The
problem remains the same today as it did for Engels.
For
those in Cardiff, on
Queen Street (Newport Road end), there is a weekly Socialist Party stall
every Saturday, 1pm to 3pm, (weather permitting)
South
Wales Branch (Swansea)
Meets
2nd Monday 7.30pm, Unitarian Church, High Street, SA1 1NZ
(except January, April, July & October)
Contact: Geoffrey Williams, 19 Baptist Well Street, Waun Wen, SA1 6FB
01792 643624
(except January, April, July & October)
Contact: Geoffrey Williams, 19 Baptist Well Street, Waun Wen, SA1 6FB
01792 643624
South
Wales Branch (Cardiff)
Meets
2nd Saturday 12noon, Caffè Nero, Capitol Shopping Centre, Queen
Street, CF10 2HQ
(January, April, July & October)
Contact: Richard Botterill, 21 Pen-Y-Bryn Road, Galbalfa, CF14 3LG
02920 615826
botterillr@gmail.com
(January, April, July & October)
Contact: Richard Botterill, 21 Pen-Y-Bryn Road, Galbalfa, CF14 3LG
02920 615826
botterillr@gmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment