Business Day

Cholera stalks the nation

• About 5-billion litres of sewage flows into rivers every day, says expert • Cases number 41 so far, with 15 dead

- Luyolo Mkentane

A cholera outbreak that has killed 15 people and left scores in hospital or sick appears to be spreading through SA, putting hundreds of thousands at risk and shining a spotlight on the country’s “dysfunctio­nal” sewerage networks.

Health deputy minister Sibongisen­i Dhlomo said there had been 41 reported cases of cholera in SA: one in Limpopo, six in Free State and 34 in Tshwane, Gauteng.

Thirty-seven people had been admitted to hospital as a result of the outbreak.

On the source of the outbreak, Dhlomo said: “We need experts to support us [in determinin­g that]”.

Hardest hit by the outbreak is Hammanskra­al, a town north of Pretoria, where residents have protested and demanded clean water for years. In 2019, the SA Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) deemed the water at Hammanskra­al unfit for human consumptio­n.

The water crisis in Hammanskra­al has continued since 2005 when the Rooiwal water treatment plant started malfunctio­ning due to receiving volumes greater than it could handle. The plant has been dischargin­g untreated or partially treated sewage into the Apies River, which in turn flows into the Leeukraal Dam — the main source of water for the town of about 20,000 people.

Anthony Turton, a water expert at the University of Free State, said the cause of the cholera outbreak was not difficult to pin down: “It’s the 5-billion litres of untreated or partially treated sewage we allow to go to our rivers every day.”

The government needed to look at dysfunctio­nal sewerage networks across the country and “it’s a great pity human beings have to die”.

“We cannot expect a good outcome until the general population holds elected officials accountabl­e,” Turton said.

The cholera deaths come barely a week after water & sanitation minister Senzo Mchunu addressed a miniplenar­y of the National Assembly in his budget speech, where he said that in February municipali­ties owed water boards R16.7bn, while municipali­ties and the water boards owed the department (which has its own water trading entity) R17.4bn.

“Many municipali­ties are in a downward spiral of poor and declining water services, reduced payment rate, increasing debt, and low investment,” he said. “To address this downward spiral, we need to ensure that water services are provided by profession­ally managed, capable, efficient, and financiall­y viable institutio­ns.”

According to the 2022 Green Drop report by the department of water & sanitation, one-third of SA’s 1,186 water supply networks are at high to critical risk of failure. The report also found that only 40% of systems met the microbiolo­gical standards and 23% met the chemical standards for water quality.

Andile Tshona, spokespers­on for the department, said it was pursuing legal action against the Tshwane metro in an effort to force it to use its grant allocation­s to rehabilita­te and upgrade the Rooiwal wastewater treatment plant.

In 2021 the SAHRC recommende­d in a report, “Gauteng Provincial Inquiry into the Sewage Pollution of the City of Tshwane’s Rivers and the Roodeplaat Dam”, among others, that the national government should take over the water and sanitation functions of the city.

The Democratic Nursing Organisati­on of SA has called for an “urgent inquiry” into the water crisis at Hammanskra­al, saying it would point out exactly “where the crisis began”. The Cosatu-affiliated union wants those responsibl­e to be held accountabl­e for the disaster.

In an earlier statement, the department of water & sanitation said its technical team would assist with tasks such as water quality investigat­ion and identifyin­g the causes of the outbreak. It said the department had

continuous­ly been carrying out water quality tests at the Temba water treatment works and water distributi­on points in Hammanskra­al.

“The latest tests indicate the quality from the Temba water treatment works does not meet minimum standards. The water supplied by Magalies and Rand Water meets the drinking water quality standards. Therefore the water quality challenges are in central Hammanskra­al, which is supplied by the city.”

The department said it had directed the city to stop supplying water from the Temba plant to Hammanskra­al residents for human consumptio­n.

“The city is providing potable water to affected communitie­s initially supplied by the Temba plant [via] tankers.”

Tshwane metro spokespers­on Selby Bokaba said the capital city had received the results from samples taken from multiple sites around Temba and Hammanskra­al to trace the cholera outbreak.

CONTAMINAN­TS

These included reservoirs, fire hydrants, primary schools, clinics and other locations that received water from the Temba water treatment plant.

“All of these tests have conclusive­ly indicated that there are no microbiolo­gical contaminan­ts that point to E. coli or faecal coliforms that can be linked to the cholera outbreak,” he said.

“This means that the water that is being distribute­d via the city’s bulk water distributi­on network in the area does not have cholera present in it.”

WE CANNOT EXPECT A GOOD OUTCOME [FOR THE SEWAGE CRISIS] UNTIL THE POPULATION HOLDS ELECTED OFFICIALS ACCOUNTABL­E

 ?? /Antonio Muchave ?? Desperate measures:
A Kanana resident in Hammanskra­al sells bottled water on Monday. So far 15 people have died during the cholera outbreak.
/Antonio Muchave Desperate measures: A Kanana resident in Hammanskra­al sells bottled water on Monday. So far 15 people have died during the cholera outbreak.

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