“I can’t recall the last time I saw the municipal rubbish truck”: Makhanda families dump their rubbish in the street
But the municipality says it collects rubbish regularly
- Rubbish is piling up in illegal dumpsites in parts of Makhanda in the Eastern Cape.
- The municipality says it regularly collects rubbish, but some residents say they haven’t seen a municipal rubbish truck for years.
- They say the illegal sites are a health hazard and provide hiding places for criminals.
Parts of Makhanda are drowning in a flood of uncollected rubbish, with flies swarming over babies’ nappies, adult diapers, and dead animals in illegal dumpsites. The municipality says rubbish is collected regularly, but families in areas GroundUp visited said they hadn’t seen a municipal rubbish truck for a while.
GroundUp visited areas like Phumlani, Fingo Village, Extension 9 and Joza , where residents took us around the illegal dumping sites which they say are becoming an uncontrollable problem. In some places vegetation and long grass showed that the dumping sites have been there a long time.
Mvikeli Saki in Fingo Village showed us a dumping site right next to homes. “We are breathing this filthy stench from these dumping sites. The garbage in the area has caused smells and rats that come inside our homes. I can’t recall the last time I saw the municipal rubbish truck. If the municipality was serious about fighting illegal dumping they would intensify the collection of rubbish across. People just find a spot and throw rubbish. Because if you hang a bag on your gate and wait for the municipal truck to collect, dogs, donkeys and dogs will tear up that rubbish and scatter it around,” said Saki.
Mbulelo Nzwili from Phumlani location said the illegal dumping sites are not just a health hazard but also hiding places for thugs. ”Even during the day here in Phumlani you can’t pass these illegal dumping sites alone.”
In Extension 9, resident Eric Matyobeni, said the municipality used to distribute black refuse bags to every household in Makhanda.
“I don’t know what happened but that stopped years ago. Every week, on the day the truck came to collect rubbish they used to distribute the refuse bags. That was done regularly and illegal dumping sites were not like this. We are buying the black refuse plastic bags on our own now. Those who can’t afford end up throwing their rubbish in these illegal dumping sites,” said Matyobeni.
Joza resident Sizeka Mantshongo said several streets in the area were littered with garbage and open field were covered with dumped rubble.
“The municipality fails to collect refuse regularly and animals help themselves and scatter the rubbish. In the past few weeks business people have cleaned up another illegal dumping site next to Samuel Ntlebi and CM Vellem Primary Schools. We are living a very sad life including the unstoppable sewage running in the streets,” said Mantshongo.
Makana Municipality Infrastructure and Engineering Services Portfolio Chairperson Ramie Xonxa dismissed the allegations by residents. He didn’t answer question of what causes these illegal dumping sites, but he said it was “not true” that the municipality did not collect rubbish regularly. Each area knows its day for collection,” he said. “The municipality collects refuse weekly.”
He said the municipality also supplied rubbish bags.
GroundUp visited Luvuyo location in Fingo Village on Wednesday and there was no municipal truck collecting rubbish. Residents said years back the truck used to come on Wednesdays twice a month. In Joza GroundUp did see the truck, but resident Zintle Bunyonyo said households did not receive refuse bags. “I can’t remember when we last received the refuse bags but it’s years ago,” said Bunyonyo.
In Kwamnqayi, residents said rubbish used to be collected on Thursdays but was no longer being collected. There was no sign of a truck when GroundUp visited. In Zolani Location, residents also said refuse was not collected and no refuse bags were distributed.
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