City growth topic of African forum

JOHANNESBURG — With more than half of Africa’s population expected to live in cities by the year 2050, a gathering Sunday in South Africa is exploring new models for urban Africa.

Hundreds of city officials from across Africa gathered for the seventh Africities Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa’s largest city, to discuss the future of urbanization on the continent.

“What has worked yesterday might not work today,” said Jeff Radebe, South Africa’s minister responsible for planning, as he opened the five-day meeting.

Radebe warned that if development does not match population growth, future cities will face more crumbling infrastructure and social unrest.

Another key topic for the meeting is climate change. Among the delegates was Deputy Mayor of Paris Patrick Klugman, who described the French capital as “arguably the most African city outside of Africa” because of its high population of African immigrants.

In the wake of attacks in Paris and Mali’s capital, Bamako, urban security is also on the agenda.

Citizens isolated by poverty are vulnerable to extremism, said Khalifa Ababacar Sall, mayor of Senegal’s capital, Dakar.

“What the international community forgets is that these people are the first victims,” Sall said.

The meeting has been held in various African cities every three years since it was started in 1998 in Abidjan.

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