Sowetan

Soweto owes as much as 60 councils

Residents resist prepaid meters

- By Isaac Mahlangu ■ mahlangui@sowetan.co.za

Soweto residents owe Eskom R15-bn in unpaid electricit­y bills – the same amount that close to 60 municipali­ties combined also owed the utility.

Eskom said most Soweto households don’t pay for electricit­y and were resisting the installati­on of prepaid meters, leaving it with a headache.

Eskom spokesman Khulu Phasiwe said: “The solution for Soweto needs urgent government interventi­on. The problem is getting worse.”

Eskom only provides about 180 000 households with electricit­y but the township’s principal debt is R7-bn, which has accumulate­d interests of R8-bn, Phasiwe said.

“We disconnect people who don’t pay, but some work with our technician­s to reconnect themselves,” Phasiwe said.

He said around 17 000 customers in Soweto have had their electricit­y cut off due to nonpayment but many illegally reconnecte­d themselves.

The township’s unpaid electricit­y bills were now more than double Eskom’s top five defaulting municipali­ties.

Cleopatra Shezi, the secretary of the Soweto Electricit­y Crisis Committee, which opposes the installati­on of prepaid meters, said most Sowetans can’t afford to pay for electricit­y. “We can’t afford to use our last money that should get us bread and pay for electricit­y,” Shezi said.

She said illegal reconnecti­ons would continue until there was a “reasonable solution” such as Eskom investing in alternativ­e sources of energy like wind and solar for people’s benefit.

Thandi Sangweni, from the Gauteng Concerned Committee, said: “There’s too much poverty in Soweto, and, unfortunat­ely, prepaid meters mean if one doesn’t have money they can’t have electricit­y.”

She said people have a right to refuse prepaid meters.

The debt (90 days or older) of all defaulting SA’s municipali­ties combined was standing at R15-bn, as only about 28 municipali­ties fully adhere to payment arrangemen­ts on their electricit­y accounts.

Phasiwe said the only viable solution was switching to prepaid metering, which Sowetans strongly oppose, with only 40 000 having prepaid meters.

“We’re not targeting Soweto with prepaid meters, we just want all our customers to monitor their usage,” Phasiwe said.

Phasiwe said some of those on prepaid in Soweto had bypassed the Eskom prepaid meters or sourced power coupons from the illegal ghost vendors.

 ?? / KABELO MOKOENA ?? Soweto residents resist installati­on of prepaid meters for their electricit­y supply.
/ KABELO MOKOENA Soweto residents resist installati­on of prepaid meters for their electricit­y supply.

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