Monday, May 15, 2017

No garbage collected in Marikana for nine months



City says settlement is on private land and it cannot provide the service




Photo of rubbish

One of the two sections in Marikana where residents dump rubbish. Garbage has not been collected since August last year. Photo: Thembela Ntongana


According to residents, rubbish has not been collected in Marikana since August last year.

“We have been writing to the City [of Cape Town] as well as our ward councillor asking for plastic bags and containers, but nothing [has happened]. The place is just getting worse,” says community leader Sipho Tofile.

The informal settlement has 6,000 people in six sections listed A to F. Tofile says people have no other option, but to dump their rubbish. Piles of garbage fill two open spaces, one used by sections A to C and another by sections D to F.

Tofile says, “It is difficult to even get into the toilets because the rubbish is slowly piling up in front of them. Even the people that clean them are complaining.”

Resident Zolile Hamnca says that when it’s windy, the rubbish spreads all over the place.

“Children play here because they see an open space, and we also see animals eating this dirt,” says Hamnca.

He says every time they request assistance from the City, they are told it cannot be provided because Marikana is on private land.

Marikana residents occupied the property in 2014 and are currently awaiting judgement in a court case in which the landowners want the state to buy them out or compensate them.

“How do they choose what not to provide and what to provide?” asks Hamnca. “Because other services, like toilets, we get, but we cannot get plastic bags and containers?”

Residents also point out that the City has previously collected rubbish.
By Thembela Ntongana


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