
Why you should visit – and stay in – Johannesburg's Soweto
But after an hour or two, most of which is confined to the inside of a bus, these tourists will leave the suburbs and trundle back to Johannesburg city – then likely head out to Kruger National Park for a safari, perhaps fly down to Durban for a beach break, or maybe make their way to Cape Town to drive out to the beautiful Winelands.
Far fewer travellers will spend a full day in the township, and take the time to walk the streets, meet the communities that have grown here and dine at the restaurants where locals eat their meals. Fewer still will decide to stay a night. But to do so is to miss the heart and soul of Soweto.
This is why Lebo's Backpackers decided to do things differently. Set up roughly 15 years ago by Lebo Malepa, who had grown up in Soweto and wanted to encourage a type of tourism that was beneficial to the community, the guest house allows visitors to stay within the township and experience the culture of Soweto while mingling with locals and learning about day-to-day life. Rather than pressing their nose against a coach window, guests can cycle or walk around the neighbourhoods, chat to the people who live there, eat at neighbourhood restaurants and then stay in comfortable rooms at the guest house or camp on the well equipped site on the premises.
For many, Soweto conjures up images of crime and poverty, and while it is true that both are significant issues, there is far more to these neighbourhoods. An acronym for South Western Township, Soweto first existed as a settlement at the start of the 20th century – although it was in the 1930s that the first township of Orlando was created as the white government hardened its segregationist stance and forced Black people out of the city and suburbs. As its residents battled against the cruelty of apartheid, Soweto became a symbol of resistance and the struggle for democracy.
The Soweto of today is very different to that of the 1970s when the world watched protests on the streets and the brutal repression by police. In fact, some have even bemoaned the gentrification of the township. While there are unpaved roads, rundown hostels and homes with rusted corrugated roofs in neighbourhoods where running water and electricity is sporadic or non-existent, there's also a growing middle class who live in gated homes, drive fancy cars and sip cocktails at swanky bars on Vilakazi Street. As is so often the case in South Africa, the inequality is stark – but there is a complexity and nuance to these neighbourhoods that goes far beyond the slum image the city often carries.
The staff at Lebo's aim to show this. On a spring afternoon, I stood alongside Lebo's brother Phillip Malepa at the community gardens attached to the hostel on a hill overlooking Soweto, gazing over the vast expanse of the township across to Johannesburg's abandoned mine dumps in the distance, where many of the city's residents once worked.
Lebo Malepa spent much of his life working among tourists, from his early days selling T-shirts and trinkets at market stalls to renting out a room to travellers in the family home, and then buying bicycles and tuk-tuks to take visitors around. He died on Christmas Day 2021, aged just 46, but his wife Maria and family continue to run the hostel and tours, employing local Sowetans and working closely with residents to create a model that benefits the community.
Maria explains that is it important to visit the 'tourist sites' like Nelson Mandela's house; the bustling Vilakazi Street filled with stalls, shops and cafes; and the Hector Pieterson memorial that tells the story of the 1976 Soweto uprising in which hundreds were killed (the image of the lifeless 12-year-old Pieterson being carried away from the violence is one of the most heart-wrenching of the apartheid era), but Lebo's tours aim to go further.
By travelling by bicycle or on foot, visitors can take their time and visit places that are not well known, but tell so much about the story of Soweto and apartheid. While in the city, I was taken to see the hostels where male labourers were split up and housed when Black South Africans were brought to Soweto as a cheap labour force for the surrounding mines.
Maria explained how a visit like this helps visitors explore some of the lesser-known parts of Soweto's history. She points to the single women's hostel that she says acts as a reminder of the female struggle both during apartheid and after democracy, and Meadowlands where the government divided groups by race after forcibly removing them from Sophiatown in Johannesburg, which had been declared a 'white' neighbourhood in the 1950s.
'I think so much of your understanding of the country starts here,' she told me. 'By coming here you will leave South Africa really having understood a little bit more. This sort of experience really kind of gets under your skin. I think it's something that we can't really touch and we don't even quite know how to explain it.'
I was visiting South Africa with travel company Intrepid. Clinton Els, Intrepid's regional general manager for Africa and the Middle East, explained to me that the company felt it was important not only to enable their travellers to experience this side of the city, but also to ensure it was done in an authentic way that benefits the local communities.
He added: 'It saddens me that some tour companies treat Soweto like an attraction by just viewing it through the windows of a bus before moving on to the next point of interest. These are real people, living in a real community. It's important for people to experience the 'real' Soweto – not just certain streets and flashy houses, but the areas that've been somewhat ignored and forgotten.'
After exploring the city – including a stop at a local restaurant for a snack of beef cheek and a maize dish called pap – we join other travellers at the backpackers hostel to share a lunch of stews and curries with ingredients sourced from the market and community gardens, cooked the traditional way over an open fire. Meals are served in the outdoor restaurant, which is a revamped former dump site that has been turned into a very pleasant park.
Beyond the hostel's ground, you will also find good local food at the Disoufeng Pub & Restaurant in Meadowlands and Native Rebels in Jabavu, or you can watch performances at Sawubona Music Jam, a weekly live music event held every Tuesday in Chiawelo.
While in Soweto I also spoke with Joseph Tshehla, one of Intrepid's guides who lives in the township with his young son. He told me: 'Soweto is home to the African saying Ubuntu – 'I am what I am because of who we all are.' In Soweto, locals make sure the door is always open for neighbours to come knock when they need sugar.'
He adds: 'You need to walk through the town to get a feel for being part of the community and understand the history. Just driving through won't let you fully experience the culture.'
Maybe a day or two here will only let you scratch the surface and get a taste of what Soweto is truly like (in fact, Maria recommends spending a week or more). But it is a taste that will allow you to see beyond the crime statistics and news reports. Most importantly, you can speak to those who call the city their home, share meals and listen to music – and that's something you certainly can't experience through a bus window.
Annabel was travelling in South Africa as a guest of Intrepid Travel.
Intrepid Travel runs two tours that include the Soweto experience with Lebo's Backpackers. The Experience Southern Africa (16 days, from £3,259pp) tour takes travellers through South Africa, Botswana, and Zimbabwe, including stunning nature, encounters with endangered species and the chance to stay in local communities.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE It's the Instagram-friendly Mediterranean gem beloved of the A-listers... but are hordes of half naked, badly behaved tourists now ruining the picture-perfect port?
It's just gone 9.30am and the first of dozens of ferries carrying hundreds of tourists has arrived in the picturesque port of Portofino. The tiny fishing village, described as one of Italy 's 'natural jewels', has a population in the winter of just 350 but in the summer, it can increase twenty-fold as day trippers, and influencers hit the tiny streets. It's a magnet for VIPs as well with NBA legend magic Johnson visiting earlier his month and rock legends Elton John and Rod Stewart being regulars. But it emerged this week that the town - famed for its pastel houses and pretty waterside square lined with cafes, restaurants and designer boutiques - is now such a must do stop off point for tourists that it's becoming overrun. And indeed when MailOnline visited this week, we found the tiny Instagram-famous town was heaving with visitors with its narrow streets frequently so crowded they were impassible. Now the huge daily influx of visitors has led to many complaining visitors don't know how to behave decently. So of earlier this week mayor Matteo Viacava has introduced a bylaw until September 30 warning travellers to behave respectfully and with a degree of decorum that befits a fashionable and wealthy town with the one of the highest prop capita salaries in Italy (£90,000). Wandering around bare chested or in a swimsuit is strictly forbidden, as is strolling barefoot, through the town. And if you are thinking of stretching out on one of the benches to catch a few rays or have a snooze don't even think about it as that's banned too, along with drinking alcohol in public and having a picnic. When MailOnline visited this week, we found the tiny Instagram-famous town was heaving with visitors with its narrow streets frequently so crowded they were impassible Sitting or lying on paths and in the park is also against the rules and mayor Viacava has said anyone who breaches the edict will face a fine of up to 500 Euro. (£433) The order, number 17 of the year, is on the council's website and in a lofty word heavy title called:' Measures to protect public safety and security and the tranquillity and rest of residents and guards and safeguard the territory and environment'. Totalling eight pages, the bylaw explains the motive for the rules as being the 'heavy influx of tourists into the area during the summer months' which has 'impacted on civility and decorum'. But the news doesn't appear to have reached everyone as when MailOnline visited Portofino several tourists were wandering around shirtless and in swimwear and oblivious of the law. Landscape architect Elias Halling, 35, from Gothenburg, Sweden, was strolling around the famous piazza topless, enjoying the scenery and was stunned when told by MailOnline he was breaking the law. 'Really ?!,' he gasped before adding:' To be honest I was wondering why people were looking at me in a weird way. I had no idea at all it was against the law. 'The place is beautiful, and so are a lot of the people, but I don't see what harm I'm doing by walking around bare chested. 'I suppose the mayor wants to keep standards high, you can tell this is quite an upmarket place by looking at all the designer shops and expensive restaurants. 'The fine seems a lot of money for something which is pretty trivial but if they want to have that kind of strange law then I suppose I had a better follow it even though its 35c and so hot.' A little further on and past the multimillion superyachts bobbing in the water and the jetty where yet more ferries are docking from nearby Genoa, Rapallo and Santa Margherita Ligure, MailOnline spotted another pair of transgressors. Standing by the water edge was bare chested Pieter Van Dooren, 31, and his shoeless girlfriend Lieke Schins, 25, first time visitors to Portofino and both overwhelmed by its beauty but unaware of its bylaw. Recruitment entrepreneur Pieter, from Tilburg, Holland, said:'Oh my goodness, I don't want to get into trouble. Five hundred Euro is a lot of money to pay for just not wearing a shirt.' If you are thinking of stretching out on one of the benches to catch a few rays or have a snooze don't even think about it as that's banned too, along with drinking alcohol in public and having a picnic As we spoke worried student Lieke, hurriedly slipped into her sandals in case she was spotted by local police and said:' I don't want a fine either.' Pieter added: 'This place is like a fantasy world, it is so beautiful, a paradise and so elegant and romantic, so maybe that explains why the mayor has introduced this law. 'But you've got me worried as technically standing talking to you now I am illegal, although we had no idea of this law, I just wasn't aware until you told me so I'm lucky to have met you. 'You can tell it is a high-class elegant place, so maybe that's why the law was brought in, there seems to be a lot of people here and he doesn't want people walking round drunk and half naked. Having said that, I had better put my shirt on now.' Lieke added: 'It is so pretty here but at the same time so expensive, we were charged 100 Euro for four Prosecco and a few pieces of melon and ham. 'We knew it wasn't cheap here but still 100 Euro is a lot of money, but the prices don't seem to put people off, it's so busy but I had no idea of this crazy law so I will put my sandals on.' Portofino is certainly not the place for those on a budget – glance at one menu revealed a breakfast of bacon, eggs and cappuccino was an eyewatering 25 Euro (£21), with service not included. Requests for an interview with the mayor and had of local police for MailOnline were politely declined, as were requests over how many fines have been issued since the law was introduced. Intriguingly at one-point MailOnline spotted another bare chested man and approached an officer to tell them of the infringement but was given a curt brush off:' I'm doing my job, I'm here on parking duty, you stick with your job.' Meanwhile in a further bid to control the crowds police have also set up a checkpoint a mile from Portofino, once the 160 official car park spaces in the multi storey are full no vehicles are allowed in. Instead, travellers have to use shuttle buses to get in and out of Portofino and it was only thanks to flashing a press card that MailOnline was allowed in, with the officer on duty saying:' It is rammed in there, so good luck finding a space and don't park illegally.' Portofino's beauty is quite clear to see but it's also evident many visitors are there on a tick boxing exercise merely to post on social media as one bizarre scene unfolded in front of MailOnline. Setting up a tripod, by the water's edge, one woman dressed all in white began doing a series of 'lives' to her followers, pointing out the sights and occasionally pulling the edge of her skirt back to reveal her thigh. One local waiter said: 'It's crazy, it just gets busier and busier every year and yes ok it's good for business, but the numbers are just too much and the class of visitor is also not what it used to be. 'People come and take selfies, and they walk around in swim wear or bare chested, some covered in tattoos and it's not very pleasant to look at, the locals are all in favour of this new law. 'On busy days we can get 5,000 people a day and then when a cruise ship turns up that can bring in another 2,000 so imagine all those people in a tiny place like this.' Cruise ships are the thorn in Portofino's side and anchor just off the coast as they are far too big to come any closer, ferrying travellers to and from in tenders that criss cross the crystal clear Ligurian Sea. A glance at cruise timetables reveals that between now and the end of the month six giant ships are due in – one every 48 hours carrying almost 8,000 travellers in total. A worker at one of the upmarket boutiques told MailOnline:' It's some of these people on cruise ships that have no idea how to behave. 'They come here dressed in hardly anything, lowering the tone of Portofino and just rush about taking selfies, we have a reputation for class and elegance and just want people to follow the rules.' Speaking to local media as the order was revealed, mayor Viacavo also revealed next year an app would be introduced 'controlling the number of visitors' to Portofino by locking onto the number of mobiles active in the area. Mr Viacavo declined to go into details of how exactly the app would work but added:' Portofino is a jewel, whatever time of day it is and wherever you are, there are always people here and we are working to improve visitor experience. 'I'm not talking about putting a limit on numbers, but what I am saying is we must be able to control these numbers to allow the quality of life of locals to continue and make the visitor experience comfortable, if not even better. 'What we hope to do with the app is show the best time to visit, when it is quieter, we are not going to close Portofino off, it is for everybody, and I can't say to someone 'You can't come in but you can'. But as yet another shirtless tourist strolled across the square unchallenged, you had to wonder whether the bylaw was a meaningful act of law or just a simple publicity stunt.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Labour's endless red tape is killing off the Welsh holiday
Has your holiday let business been affected by anti-tourist policies? Email money@ After a 37-year career in the Royal Navy, Ian Pattinson is tougher than most. But there's one thing that keeps the former captain awake at night and it's nothing to do with his military service – it's his Welsh holiday home. 'Every single day I worry about whether I'm going to make 182,' he says. Pattinson is referring to the number of days his two cottages have to be let each year to qualify for business rates following a change by the Welsh government two years ago. If he fails to hit the target, the properties will be subject to council tax leaving Pattinson with a £2,000 bill. For some Welsh holiday let owners, the bill can come close to £10,000 because their properties are subject to paying a 200pc second home premium. The 182-night rule is just one of a raft of measures brought in by the Welsh government in the past five years that has seen overnight tourist numbers plummet and holiday let owners exit the business. The Professional Association of Self-Caterers (Pasc) has identified 17 government interventions from both the Senedd and Westminster that it says are negatively impacting the sector in Wales. Pattinson, 66, moved to the outskirts of Newport in Pembrokeshire with his wife 10 years ago so the two could enjoy a comfortable retirement. The stone cottages are nestled against the slopes of the ancient Preseli Mountains, in the heart of Pembrokeshire Coast National Park. 'For 10 years, we were living the dream. It was excellent. We only had to hit 70 days a year [to qualify for business rates] which we could easily manage. My wife and I both made £7,500 each per cottage and it helped boost our retirement income. 'But the onslaught of policies flooding through the industry at the moment is unbelievable.' On top of a daily worry about whether he'll be landed with a council tax bill, he expects it will cost him £15,000 to upgrade the former farm building to achieve an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating of C, thanks to Ed Miliband's net zero drive. It all comes as the Welsh government has given the green light for councils to pass an overnight visitor levy, which will leave a family of four spending an extra £72.80 in tax for a two-week stay. Fewer families and shorter stays The problem is fewer families are going on holiday in Wales and those that do aren't staying for long. Of the nearly 70 million people who visit Wales each year, around 90pc are day trips. Since 2022, there has been a 29pc decline in overnight stays, according to data from the Welsh government. Holiday spending is also down by 10pc in the same period. Although Pattinson has in recent years managed to reach the 182-night benchmark, he says the stress of the job and the diminishing returns means he will have to give up one of the cottages. 'We are able to make between 185 and 190 days, but what that means is I can never take my eye off the ball. I can never sit back and relax. My accountant tells me each one of those cottages provides £35,000 spin-off benefits to the local economy. Now I've shut one of them down, that's £35,000 gone straight away. If you multiply that out over what's happening in the rest of Wales, that number starts to build up.' It appears Pattinson's thesis is correct. Although the number of holiday let owners exiting the market is difficult to measure, the Welsh government's recent survey of tourism businesses found 39pc said they had fewer visitors in the last year compared with a year earlier. Tourism provides one in 10 jobs in Wales, contributing £3.8bn to the economy each year. According to Pasc, there are around 22,000 self-catering businesses in Wales. A recent survey of Welsh members found that almost half (47pc) of properties that pay council tax because they don't meet the 182-day requirement were operating at a loss. Pattinson believes the biggest mistake the Welsh government has made is to take a one-size-fits-all all approach to its policies. 'It's lazy policy-making. If I lived in Newport or Tenby, I probably wouldn't have to get out of bed to make 182 days, but I'm only four miles out of Newport and the numbers fall off almost like a cliff when you are not in those hotspots.' 'It's harming the Welsh economy' Julian Barnes, a retired glass manufacturer from Bodfari in Denbighshire, north Wales, is far away from the traditional tourism hotspots. 'The best we've ever managed was 127 days in the year after Covid.' He says the idea that his end-of-terrace cottage in the rural village home to 500 people will be let for 182 nights is a fantasy. 'They want to introduce a visitor levy, an EPC requirement, there's registration, employment rights, statutory licencing – a whole pile of things that are growing to make it more and more difficult to run what was a simple business that brought in a lot of trade to the village.' It means Barnes has resigned himself to paying double council tax on the property, which recently rose to a 150pc premium in April. 'The total bill is £4,956 for 42 sq m. The council tax premium for us means we are paying £118 a sq m in tax.' He says last year the cottage brought in £10,000 in revenue which left him and his wife, a retired midwife, with a £3,000 profit. This year, he expects they'll be lucky if they end up with £2,000 after their fixed costs rose by 25pc. He adds: 'That assumes we do all the cleaning, gardening and maintenance for free. We take at least five hours to turn the cottage around. If it was paid per hour, it would be around £1 an hour – you can forget your minimum wage. The Government talks about working people, well we are working people except we are working for basically nothing.' Barnes and his wife are planning to sell the cottage. He says: 'There are groups of us all over the country in dire straits with these businesses and it's harming the Welsh economy. 'One of the big attractions of our cottage is you can walk to the village pub. We reckon we bring about £10,000 worth of business to the pub each year. There are four of us in the village who have holiday lets. If we go, that's an awful lot of money for a rural business to lose.' 'I am absolutely trapped' But while some holiday let owners are deciding to get out, others who rely on it as their main source of income feel trapped. Nicki Robinson, 61, a former cattle farmer from Carmarthenshire, turned her old dairy into a holiday cottage in 2006 after her farming business was no longer financially viable. Almost 20 years later, she can see the same process happening again as her holiday let business struggles to stay afloat. 'I am absolutely trapped. 'If I don't achieve 182 days, the daft thing is you are not earning as much but you've then got to suddenly find an extra £3,000 to pay council tax. 'It's not because you are not trying. The cottages are up 365 days a year but we just can't achieve that level of occupancy because we are not near beaches, castles or other tourist attractions. It's simply clean accommodation with a rural outlook.' Robinson says it's not just government policy that has harmed the industry. 'When I started, I got so many of my bookings direct through the tourism office and I would have families come and stay for up to 10 days at a time. 'Now bookings come through online sites that take 25pc of the revenue and the stays are so much shorter. I recently had a run of stays where I did five changeovers in seven days. 'Rather than getting families, we are seen as an alternative to a budget hotel. Bookings come in at the last minute and people want to stay for one or two nights. 'In effect, I am working every day of the year for a job that pays less than minimum wage.' The Welsh government has said its policies against holiday let owners are designed to help local people get on the housing ladder but Robinson says this is completely misguided. 'I've got a 26-year-old son who is desperately trying to get on the property ladder. But you don't fix the lack of affordable social housing by trying to destroy the livelihoods of those who rely on tourism.'


BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Barnsley museum in England's top 15 free attractions list
A council-run museum has been named in the top 15 most popular free visitor attractions in England, according to new Hall Museum in Barnsley is also the most-visited attraction in Yorkshire that does not charge for entry, Visit England total, Barnsley Museums sites received more than two million visitors in 2024, and 36.3m tourists came to South Yorkshire - a year-on-year increase of 5%, based on data from the Local Visitor Economy region's mayor, Oliver Coppard, said: "South Yorkshire is home to an incredible array of culture, creativity and character." Cannon Hall was acquired by the council from the Spencer-Stanhope family in the 1950s and opened as a museum. It has a Georgian walled garden, glasshouses and Victorian pleasure data estimated that tourists brought in £3.7bn for the region's Wildlife Park in Doncaster was the most popular paid-for attraction in 2024, with more than 894,000 people buying on the data, Sarah McLeod, chair of the South Yorkshire Local Visitor Economy Partnership, said: "By working collaboratively, we can drive sustainable growth, ensuring that - now more than ever - we encourage visitors to stay longer and spend more with our local businesses." The South Yorkshire Local Visitor Economy Partnership consists of Rotherham, Barnsley, Doncaster and Sheffield councils, the South Yorkshire mayoral office, and representatives from the private added: "Our heritage and culture doesn't just enrich our lives and shape who we are - it drives our economy too. With a £3.7bn boost and more than 32,000 jobs supported, the impact of arts, culture, and tourism is clear. When we invest in our people, our places and our stories, we create growth and opportunity, and we build hope." Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North