Picture and words: Sandiso Phaliso / GroundUp
Shack dwellers who were recently relocated to from the railway reserve they had occupied in Philippi and Nyanga, Cape Town, to land alongside Stock Road station, brought traffic to a standstill on Friday morning.
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Residents of the new settlement at Stock Road station they’ve named Loyiso Nkohla informal settlement, burnt tyres and put large rocks on the corner of Stock Road and the R300 freeway. They are demanding the City of Cape Town install electricity, supply them with water, refuse collection bags, and more toilets.
Western Cape police spokesperson Wesley Twigg told GroundUp that Public Order Police and other law enforcement agencies responded to the service delivery protest at the R300. He said the crowd dispersed when SAPS arrived and ‘no police action was taken’.
Twigg said SAPS and law enforcement agencies will remain in the area to monitor the situation.
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The protesting residents say they have had no adequate water supply since their relocation to the site next to the Stock Road train station in December. They claim water trucks were last there two weeks ago, and rubbish has not been collected at all.
Community leader Thembelani Ntelezi told GroundUp that protesters also needed the City to hire more janitors to clean their toilets. ‘Rubbish is piling up because we don’t have dedicated people to clean this area. The water tanker that the City had promised comes twice a week but has not been here in two weeks.
‘We have to rely on the neighbouring communities for water. We feel we have been dumped here. We want to know from the City when we are going to have our houses electrified because we can’t continue living in the dark anymore,’ said Ntelezi.
Resident Masonwabe Funda, a mother to three children, said she uses candles and a paraffin stove to cook because she cannot afford to connect electricity illegally from nearby Heinz Park or Acacia Park.
Funda said that the residents have vowed to protest until their demands are met.
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‘The only language that this government hears is when we take to the streets and burn tyres. Children are going to school without bathing because there is no water,’ she said.
The City of Cape Town said: ‘Numerous newly established communities are demanding services but currently the City is unable to cater for these unplanned settlements as existing recognised informal settlements are prioritised on the basis of available resources, which are not limitless. Planned and budgeted projects are prioritised.
‘The City takes the grievances of residents seriously. We have an open-door policy and urge residents to approach us in good faith, about their concerns.’
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Picture and words: Sandiso Phaliso/GroundUp