South Africa cholera outbreak re-ignites anger over service delivery
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[May 26, 2023]
By Carien du Plessis
HAMMANSKRAAL, South Africa (Reuters) - When a cholera outbreak was
confirmed in Hammanskraal, just north of South Africa's capital
Pretoria, it was hardly a surprise to many of its residents queuing up
for handouts of bottles of clean water and soap.
"If you drink the (tap) water, your stomach is running," Joyce Tshweau,
51, said, after braving the long line for the clean water meant to help
curb an epidemic that has already killed 21 people.
Clean water and sanitation have always been an issue in Hammanskraal, a
poor area housing about 120,000 people, as it is in several parts of
South Africa.
It is not known how the epidemic began and whether it is connected to
Hammanskraal's dirty water. Authorities are investigating the origin of
the outbreak. Cholera is more associated with Africa's least developed
countries than the capital of its most industrialised one.
But it has nonetheless highlighted complaints about service delivery
that are a top concern before national elections in 2024, which are
expected to be the toughest for the African National Congress (ANC)
since it took power at the end of white minority rule in 1994.
According to Tumelo Koitheng, 52, who chairs the Hammanskraal Residents
Forum, the municipality failed to maintain a nearby water treatment
plant and raw sewage started seeping into the water supply.
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Residents of Hammanskraal collect clean
water and sanitary products distributed by South African disaster
relief group, Gift of The Givers, after individuals died this week
in Hammanskraal, South Africa May 24, 2023. REUTERS/Ihsaan Haffejee
The municipality had been ANC-run
until 2016 when the opposition Democratic Alliance took over, but
water quality hasn't improved, residents said.
"The water had a greenish colour and you smell faeces," Koitheng
said, adding that residents were forced to buy bottled water because
visits by water tankers were infrequent.
The national department of health did not immediately respond to a
request for comment. South Africa's deputy water and sewage minister
David Mahlobo told journalists on Monday that the wastewater
treatment works around Pretoria haven't been maintained properly.
"It is a sad state of affairs that we are catering for outbreaks of
diseases (from) ... the middle ages. SA is the richest economy on
the African continent," said Jo Barnes, senior lecturer emeritus at
the faculty of medicine and health sciences at the University of
Stellenbosch.
(Reporting by Carien du Plessis; Editing by Tim Cocks and Grant
McCool)
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