Cape Times

Hotbed of disease

-

THIS letter is not discrimina­tion or a judgement against poor, rich, black or white people in South Africa, but a serious alert to the entire nation. We live in times of change whereby many diseases abound in our environmen­t, some of which we are not aware, and if we don’t act soon, we will all be at risk in future.

Our country is one of the clumsiest, most unhygienic and unhealthie­st zones in the world because of the way in which the poorest of the poor are living in informal settlement­s. Most of them live in shacks where there’s no running water or clinics, just poor sanitation. When known and unknown diseases strike, shack dwellers are badly affected.

We need to bear in mind that these people are of working-class calibre; you find them in the hospitalit­y environmen­t, serving people daily.

Thus any type of sickness can spread easily and be passed on to others around them.

Diseases don’t take your status into account; everyone is at risk.

My message is for everyone to be more responsibl­e at all times.

The reason I feel the need to say this is because some people, more especially the rich, might think they are too far from informal settlement­s to be affected. That’s a myth. The danger is facing us all. If rich people could take steps, together with poor people, to combat the threat of disease, then we can achieve a hygienic South Africa for us and future generation­s.

Proudly SA Jeremiah Daka Crossroads

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa