Mail & Guardian

Durban decays amid the filth of a

Business confidence declines as residents battle filth and other long-running problems

- Des Erasmus

ethekwini mayor Mxolisi Kaunda’s demeanour during a media briefing this week about the crippling strike that has left the city’s residents living among filth — amid water and electricit­y outages — arguably did not convey the required urgency in righting the myriad wrongs in a crumbling metro of which he is the political head.

While Kaunda spoke, roads in the metro remained littered with ooz- ing rubbish bags that have attracted flies, bees and rats, the result of a prolonged, violent strike by the South African Municipal Workers’ Union (Samwu) that has severely hamstrung waste management and cleaning services across the metro, and left one person dead.

Opposition parties, including the ANC’S shaky coalition partner the Economic Freedom Fighters, have called for Kaunda’s head, while long-suffering residents and businesses bear the brunt of consistent municipal failures exacerbate­d by the strike.

The Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry has again warned that the metro’s seeming inability to consistent­ly render basic services is detrimenta­l to businesses, which “are already suffering from dysfunctio­nal infrastruc­ture, the poor state of key tourism assets, and safety and security concerns”.

While reading from a prepared speech on Wednesday about the strike — which has rendered Durban and its suburbs a festering mess for almost three weeks — Kaunda assumed the expected gravitas, stating that the strike had “crippled service delivery” in the city and there was a “massive” backlog as a result. Leaders understood people’s “frustratio­n”, he added.

But when the time came to answer questions from journalist­s about the failures under his leadership, Kaunda slouched in his chair and listened while ANC councillor Nkosenhle Madlala, chairperso­n of the city’s governance and internatio­nal relations committee, answered on his behalf.

“It would be unfair of anyone to accuse the mayor of failing when the mayor is not the only one who is leading this city,” said Madlala.

When Kaunda assumed his position, the city was recovering from floods, after which the Covid-19 pandemic hit, followed by the July 2021 riots, which had severely harmed the city’s revenue base, said Madlala.

“It is [because of] the mayor’s leadership that we have a city to speak of in the first place,” said Madlala.

The mayor had inspired enough confidence among business owners to reinvest in ethekwini, he said.

It was opposition parties that were trying to undermine Kaunda’s work to garner votes ahead of this year’s provincial and national elections.

Kaunda had earlier accused “opportunis­tic political organisati­ons” of seeking to capitalise on the strike and “prolong it until 29 May” — the date for the elections. He said the “hopes” of those opportunis­ts were resting on a protracted strike and that it was “going to pain them” that the city had ended the strike.

So volatile had the collection of waste become since late February that the police and the community policing groups had to escort the contractor­s, late at night, to collect refuse or attend to electricit­y and other faults.

Residents, who had been told to keep their rubbish inside their properties to avoid the befoulment of suburbs, were not informed that the contractor­s were collecting in their areas or when, in order to ensure the safety of the contractor­s, who had been threatened, harassed and some assaulted, by striking workers.

The additional cost of the contractor­s had not yet been tallied, said municipal manager Musa Mbhele, although they were already on the city’s books.

The strike ended on Wednesday, according to the city, although only about 80% of workers had reported for duty by then.

But by Wednesday afternoon, community crime watch groups were posting notices on Whatsapp, asking residents not to share photos of municipal staff at work, because they were again being threatened by those still striking.

Samwu’s regional secretary in ethekwini, Xolani Dube, told the Mail & Guardian that the union had officially declared the strike over on Tuesday, although the municipali­ty had “complicate­d” matters by suspending eight shop stewards and dismissing dozens of workers.

The city and union had agreed on a period of time to “put remedies in place” to discuss benchmarki­ng at the metro, he said, but “while we are doing this, the employer is dismissing employees en masse, so we are pleading with the [municipali­ty] to please stop the suspension­s, dismissals and disciplina­ry hearings because this is a matter that can be resolved among ourselves”.

Samwu wants the salaries of ethekwini workers realigned to match those of fellow metros Ekurhuleni and Tshwane, “where workers are earning up to R3 000 and R3 500 more”, said Dube.

According to the city’s figures for the strike, 81 employees are on precaution­ary suspension for misconduct, 1891 have been given notices of misconduct, and 88 have been dismissed.

Thirteen people were arrested for contravent­ion of the court order granted to ethekwini, for malicious damage to property and damage to infrastruc­ture. They appeared in court on Wednesday and were released on bail.

The metro is still calculatin­g the cost of damages incurred, according to Mbhele, who said the amount stood at R10million “a couple of days ago but we suspect it is more than that”.

Meanwhile, residents and businesses are grappling with filth. At the Connaught Bridge Interchang­e, in an industrial area near the polluted umngeni River, what was once a small recycling plant has become a dumping ground.

Here, the waste stretches for several hundred metres, clogging up the road to well-kept businesses that, before the strike, mowed and cared for verges and grass areas themselves. Those manicured patches of lawn now heave under mountains of refuse bags, ripped open by waste pickers or burst and overflowin­g after being thrown from trucks. Small groups of men sit among the filth, drinking beer, charging people a small sum to help dump.

According to a report Mbhele submitted to council this week, equipment has been hired to “deal with” the dump at Connaught Bridge, although the M&G saw no trucks removing refuse, and only vehicles offloading it.

The backlog in services is expected to take two weeks to clear, but residents, businesses, and potential investors will remember the consequenc­es of the vandalism, infrastruc­ture damage, assault and one murder that took place during the strike for much longer.

A female supervisor in the cemetery and crematoriu­m unit in Umlazi was “accosted” while transporti­ng grave diggers and “beaten up”, Mbhele said. She died of her injuries days later. Two employees in the electricit­y unit were shot and injured. Police are investigat­ing a case of murder and two of attempted murder.

This is not the first violent strike by municipal employees. And if past actions are an indication of future ones, the threat of sporadic or no waste collection at all, compounded by frequent water and electricit­y outages outside of load-shedding, is never far off.

In 2019, under then mayor Zandile Gumede, workers blocked roads with municipal vehicles, used municipal tipper trucks to dump rubbish on the city’s streets, damaged private and public property and wrecked basic infrastruc­ture. That illegal strike also resulted in water shortages and consequent­ly allegation­s of “sabotage” being made by the municipali­ty.

Gumede, who is accused number one in a corruption trial involving Durban Solid Waste, said at the time that the city and a team from the provincial government were looking into “the whole recruitmen­t process” in the municipali­ty.

The strike was sparked by Gumede allegedly “favouring” ANC military veterans for positions in the metro in return for their political support, an accusation she denied.

In the report to the council, Mbhele also made mention of sabotage, saying the effect on water and electricit­y provision was as a direct result of sabotaged “water valves, electricit­y installati­ons, damage to municipal property such as vehicles, roads, and general disturbanc­e[s] to municipal services, such as clinics”.

The city would seek damages from Samwu, Mbhele said, although the amount was yet to be finalised.

As for rebates for uncollecte­d refuse, “we are still going to decide on the way forward for that”, he said.

It must be borne in mind, he said, that the charge for refuse did not only cover collection. There were other costs involved, such as landfill sites, maintenanc­e of those sites and “security issues”.

“It is too early for now to just say there is going to be a 100% rebate.”

But, as “a caring city” the possibilit­y would be entertaine­d. Prior to this, he said it had to be factored in that the city had “allowed” residents “to use our landfill sites for free of charge to dispose of their waste”.

Kaunda, Mbhele and Madlala were dismissive of suggestion­s that yet another violent strike and the city’s inability to consistent­ly deliver essential services had a detrimenta­l effect on business confidence, and that the metro could be viewed as too volatile a place for investment.

This is despite the chamber’s business confidence index report, issued in January with the University of Kwazulu-natal’s macroecono­mic

‘While we are [finding remedies] the employer is dismissing employees en masse’

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Photos: Jonathan Erasmus ?? Foul-up: Rubbish piles up on Durban’s streets during the three-week strike by municipal workers, who want salaries that match those in Ekurhuleni and Tshwane metros, which brought waste management and cleaning services to a halt in the city.
Photos: Jonathan Erasmus Foul-up: Rubbish piles up on Durban’s streets during the three-week strike by municipal workers, who want salaries that match those in Ekurhuleni and Tshwane metros, which brought waste management and cleaning services to a halt in the city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa