Go! & Express

Cleaning taxi rank toilets for peanuts

- ZOLILE ZAMISA

Duncan Village man needs help THULANI Maki, 39, is doing whatever he can to feed his family – including cleaning toilets at a taxi rank.

Maki, from Duncan Village, has taken it upon himself to clean the toilets of the Ebuhlanti taxi rank in East London and asks a R2 donation from those using the facilities.

Desperate for a job, Maki took the initiative to start cleaning the toilets – a job he has to do without access to proper cleaning materials or an overall to protect his clothing.

He said he had visited the municipali­ty in April last year and that Buffalo City Metropole Municipali­ty (BCMM) mayor Xola Pakati had told him to bring a letter from the taxi associatio­n in support. He had since submitted the letter but had not yet received a response.

Maki uses a broken toilet to store his equipment and clothes.

As the toilets do not have running water, he uses a 25-litre bucket to add to the tanks.

“I struggle to do my job – especially in bad weather. I do a crucial job without being paid and I survive through R2 people give me after using the toilets. If people do not use the toilets, I have to walk home without money to buy bread for my nine-year-old son.”

Ebuhlanti taxi drivers said they were not pleased with Lulamile’s working conditions.

Driver Zalisile Lipheyi said: “The man does not have a shelter. When it is raining he has to stay inside a broken toilet. No human should be working under such conditions.”

BCMM had not responded at the time of going to press.

 ?? Picture: ZOLILE ZAMISA ?? DESPERATE FOR SURVIVAL: Thulani Maki at the toilets he keeps clean
Picture: ZOLILE ZAMISA DESPERATE FOR SURVIVAL: Thulani Maki at the toilets he keeps clean

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa