Floods bring hardship and loss to Johannesburg immigrant community
"We just heard this strange sound and realized we were being attacked by the river."
Four men sit on top of a shack and watch the Jukskei river, which
runs dangerously close to homes after the river eroded the bank.
The rains that Johannesburg so desperately needed arrived in a
great deluge on Wednesday causing flash flooding which resulted in
deaths and large scale damage to property.
Bearing the brunt of this disaster was the informal settlement of
Setswetla in Alexandra. The settlement is built along the Jukskei River
which burst its banks during the heavy rainfall yesterday.
The settlement is home mainly to immigrants, many of whom hail from neighbouring Zimbabwe.
In the chaos of the flood a three-year-old girl was swept from her
father’s hands as he attempted to reach higher ground as the waters kept
on rising.
A search and rescue team utilised divers and sniffer dogs in an
attempt to find the missing girl but a storm approached the area during
the late afternoon and the search had to be postponed till the following
day.
A relative of the girl’s family said the tragedy has left them broken and distraught.
Along the river a group of men tried to rescue a vehicle which was
trapped in the mud after being completely submerged in water the
previous night. A group of men try to salvage a car ...... while another man looks at his destroyed one.
Men and women tried to salvage what they could from their completely
destroyed homes. Community members estimate that about 40 homes were
lost (we are unable to confirm this at time of publication).
Tichaona Chikato a 35-year-old immigrant from Zimbabwe sifted through
the contents of his destroyed home looking for anything which he could
salvage. He found one of his kid’s little shoes but quickly tossed it
aside after realising the other one might have been swept away with half
of his home. “It was around five in the afternoon. I was inside this
house with my wife and three kids who are three, five and seven years
old. We just heard this strange sound and realised we were being
attacked by the river. I grabbed my kids and took them to safety,” said a
forlorn Chikato who runs a small trucking business. Tichaona Chikato sifted through the contents of his destroyed home, looking for anything he could salvage.
For many immigrants whose homes were destroyed, the pressing issue is
the loss of their documentation. “Food I can buy, clothes I can buy,
this home I can fix, but those documents and papers I cannot," said
Chikato.
"For tonight I do not have a place to stay with my family as you can
see this home is completely destroyed,” he continued. He said that he
would not rebuild his home in the same space but would look for a new
place far away from the river. “I cannot continue to stay here. I have
lost everything.” A woman sitting with her baby surveys the flood damage.A man collects some of his belongings that were not destroyed in the flood.Gift of the Givers is assisting in the flooded area. The organisation requires donations and assistance.
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