Thank you very much, hon Singh. As I understand it, the Ministry of Human Settlements is no longer in charge of the Reconstruction and Development Programme. It provides human settlements and therefore anybody who falls within a particular category can apply and they do qualify to access these houses. It's no longer the case that the poorest of the poor found in informal settlements are black people only.
As I said in my last response here: I gave an example of what happened in Kroonstad where 70 white families moved into Marabastad - there were houses that were provided. They applied like everybody else, precisely because in terms of the means test they qualified and they were able to move into those houses.
The issue of people who move into informal settlements, jumping the queue ahead of the backyard dwellers, is a problem that the Ministry of Human Settlements is attending to, because they are also concerned with this phenomenon. I hope that a solution will be found. These are some of the problems that come with democracy and the removal of legal restrictions on the movements of people, because today people can move to the Western Cape and occupy a piece of land and before you know it they have applied, they are on the list, and so on. It may very well be that the same people have applied for a house in Mpumalanga and actually received it. These are some of the challenges that the Ministry of Human Settlements is attending to, and I hope that we will be able to find a solution to them. Thank you.