Monday, May 15, 2017

In photos: Cape Town’s water crisis

Perilous state of city’s water supply is starkly visible

Text by Trevor Bohatch. Photos by Ashraf Hendricks.
15 May 2017

Photo of Theewaterskloof dam
Retreating water levels at Theewaterskloof Dam have left dying plant life behind. Photo: Ashraf Hendricks

This is part one of a GroundUp special series on Cape Town’s water crisis. 
There are six major dams in Cape Town; Berg River, Steenbras Lower, Steenbras Upper, Theewaterskloof, Voëvlei, and Wemmershoek. These hold 99.6% of the city’s water capacity, with eight smaller dams, mostly on Table Mountain, responsible for a mere 0.4%. Theewaterskloof is the largest of the six major dams, with a total capacity of 480,188 megalitres. It is responsible for storing more than half of Cape Town’s surface water supply.

As of Monday 15 May, the level of Theewaterskloof was just 15.7%, compared to close to 31.3% at the same time last year, 51.3% in 2015, and 74.5% in 2014. Across the six dams the levels were a mere 21.2%, a record low.

Last year June, GroundUp reporters visited some of the dams and photographed them. We returned last week (11 May). Caution: these photos are not taken at the same time of the year, so they are not directly comparable for understanding the drop in the dam levels. GroundUp is intending to eventually have a set of directly comparable photos.

Photo of Theewaterskloof Dam October 2010
Theewaterskloof Dam in October 2010 was over 90% full. Photo from Google Maps
Photo of Theewaterskloof Dam June 2016
From a similar position as the above photo, you can see how low Cape Town’s biggest dam was in June 2016. Photo: Masixole Feni
Theewaterskloof dam on 11 May 2017. Photo: Ashraf Hendricks
If you zoom in on the photos above, you can see yellow verticle markers on the right side of the concrete column. There are four more visible in May 2017 than in June 2016.

This view shows how low Theewaterskloof is. Photo: Ashraf Hendricks
The Berg River Dam is the third largest dam supplying the city, behind Theewaterskloof and Voëlvlei. The dam was at 33% of capacity last week, higher than the 27% this time last year, but much lower than the 54% level in 2015, and 90.5% in 2014.
Though the dam wall currently stores more than 42,000 megalitres of water, parts of the reservoir are dry. In areas of the dam higher up, GroundUp reporters were able to walk across the reservoir from one bank to another. There is no sign of plant or animal life at the dam and the earth was cracked in places due to arid conditions.

The Berg River is so dry in places that you can walk across it. Photo: Ashraf Hendricks


Published originally on GroundUp .

Protesters demand secret ballot for Zuma


Constitutional Court hears argument on how Parliament should vote






Photo of protest at Constitutional Court

Unlikely allies: DA and EFF supporters marched together to the Constitutional Court on Monday




Thousands of people marched from Mary Fitzgerald Square to the Constitutional Court today. They wanted the Constitutional Court to rule that the Parliamentary vote of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma should be a secret ballot.




South Africans across the class, race and political spectrum came together in Newtown at the beginning of the protest.







Many protesters wore signs showing their displeasure with the president.







A man wears a mask as he dances at Mary Fitzgerald square before the start of the march.

By Ihsaan Haffejee




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


One killed and over 20 homes destroyed in Samora Machel




Photo of fire damage at Samora Machel

A fire left a man dead and dozens of people homeless on Sunday morning




 A man was killed in a fire that destroyed over 20 homes in Zwelitsha informal settlement in Samora Machel on Sunday morning.

According to a resident in Zwelitsha, the man who died was not from Zwelitsha. He was visiting a friend when the fire broke out.

The fire broke out at about 2:30am and destroyed 22 structures, according to the City of Cape Town’s Fire and Rescue Service.

Khululwa Ncwadi, 42, who works at a pre-school in the area, said: “I really do not know what to do now. My grade 4 and 11 school children will not go to school tomorrow (Monday). They lost all their uniforms and books to the fire”.

“When I heard noise from neighbours it was too late to collect anything except my ID.”


Grade 12 learner Thobani Yozi from Zisukhanyo Senior School also lost her belongings. “All I can do tomorrow is visit the school and try to explain to my teachers what has happened. Maybe they will understand and allow me in their lessons.” Yozi,20, said it was too late to take any important documents. “When people shouted ‘Fire! Fire!’ I had to run for safety,” he said.

Siziwe Makhanco, a farm worker, was carrying her one-year-old baby on her back and crying. “Since morning I have not had any meal. My child is hungry. I have nothing to give her. Breastfeeding is not enough for her,” she said.

Most people who spoke to Groundup urged the City to build brick houses for them or rather provide electricity in the area.

People we spoke to were not sure of the cause of the fire but suspected someone left a candle burning. The fire brigade arrived within 30min.

By Bernard Chiguvare



Sunday, May 14, 2017

Europe’s wall against African migrants is almost complete

Migrants abandoned on the Sudan-Libya border by smugglers in 2014. STR/EPA


A deal signed in Italy with tribes operating in southern Libya may be the last element of the barrier the EU has been constructing to exclude Africans from Europe. “To seal the southern Libyan border means to seal the southern border of Europe,” declared Italian foreign minister, Marco Minniti, following the signing ceremony in early April. The Conversation

The deal, negotiated in secret with leaders of the Toubou and Awlad Sulaiman ethnic groups, holds real benefits for European politicians under pressure to halt the arrival of more African migrants and refugees. Minniti explained to the Italian newspaper La Stampa that:

The Libyan border guard service will be active all along the 5,000km [3,106 mile] long south Libyan border. And in the north, migrant sea traffickers will be dealt with by the Libyan coast guard which was trained by Italian experts, and which will be equipped with 10 motor boats from April 30.

The Libyan deal is the latest part of a barrier constructed to protect Europe’s soft southern underbelly – the Mediterranean. It may not be a physical barrier comparable to Donald Trump’s wall along the US-Mexican border, but it is nearly in place.

Avenues closing


The routes that Africans have used in the past to reach Europe are fast being sealed. There is currently next to no transit by sea from West Africa through the Canary Islands. Just 144 people made it to Spain by this route between July and September 2016 according to the most recent statistics from the EU’s border force, Frontex. More crossed from the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla on Morocco’s northern coast, but they numbered just under 3,000.

The route through the Sinai and Israel also has been closed. The brutal treatment of Eritreans and Sudanese in the Sinai by mafia-style Bedouin groups, who extracted ransoms with torture and rape, was certainly a deterrent in the past. But this route was fully sealed in December 2013 when the Israeli authorities built an almost impregnable fence, blocking entry via the Sinai.

Libya and Egypt have remained possibilities for migrants, but both are now becoming increasingly difficult to cross. The latest African Intelligence report from Frontex makes this clear.

Egypt became more attractive following the brutal killing and enslavement of Africans attempting to use the Libyan route. Many are Ethiopian and Eritrean Christians, who are subjected to the most appalling abuse by members of so-called Islamic State (IS).

But even Egypt has its drawbacks. As Frontex makes clear, many refugees dodge the authorities to avoid being forcibly repatriated to their countries of origin. This has left Libya – dangerous as it is – as one of the few viable routes into Europe. Blocking this has been critical to the success of the EU’s strategy, as a recent official assessment by the European Commission made clear:

Libya is of pivotal importance as the primary point of departure for the Central Mediterranean route.

This is why the deal signed in Italy is so important. As Frontex has explained, having the co-operation of the tribes in the area is vital if the route through the southern Libyan border is to be sealed:

The Tuareg and Toubou groups dominate the local human smuggling business thanks to the fact that their clansmen are spread on both sides of the border.

Questionable co-operation


The Italian proposals are very much in line with agreements the EU reached with African leaders during a summit held in Malta, in late 2015.



The two sides signed a deal to halt the flight of refugees and migrants.
Europe offered training to “law enforcement and judicial authorities” in new methods of investigation and “assisting in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units”. The European police forces of Europol and Frontex will assist African security police in countering the “production of forged and fraudulent documents”.

This meant co-operating with dictatorial regimes, like Sudan, that’s ruler, Omar al-Bashir, is wanted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court. But al-Bashir is now seen as a friend to the West, despite his notorious record. One of Barack Obama’s last acts as president of the US was to lift sanctions against Sudan.

It is clear that Europe is determined to do all it can to reduce, and finally halt, the African exodus. But one point needs to be emphasised: the EU’s “wall” is by no means the only barrier Africans have to confront.

As Frontex makes clear, several African states have their own system of fences, or are planning to build them. These include the Moroccan wall (or “berm”) to halt the Sahrawis crossing from Algeria, as well as fences along the borders between Niger and Nigeria, Tunisia and Libya and a planned fence between Kenya and Somalia.

The obstacles confronting African migrants and refugees en route to Europe are becoming ever more severe.

Martin Plaut, Senior Research Fellow, Horn of Africa and Southern Africa, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study

This article was originally published on The Conversation.