Sowetan

Thanks for the shack ... but I need a house

While MEC’s ‘official handover’ of mkhukhu angers public, owner says she appreciate­s the space but wants a proper home with furniture

- By Douglas Mthukwane and Zoë Mahopo mahopoz@sowetan.co.za

A mother who of six was handed a new shack by the government is grateful for the gesture but she says she still needs a proper house. Yesterday, Dimakatso Serai, 38, spoke out for the first time after images of Northern Cape transport MEC Lebogang Motlhaping cutting a red ribbon at the official handover of her three-room shack in Inkandla settlement at Hartswater went viral. Serai, whose plight was picked upon by the department after her 10-year-old son Refentse died in a school bus accident, had been living in a dilapidate­d one-room shack. “I am grateful for the gesture. It was necessitat­ed by the death of my child in February, I never asked for help. “I suspect that ER Mocwaledi Primary School, where my kids attend, facilitate­d this,” Serai said.

“There’s now enough space for all my six children. I am asking myself why they didn’t bring furniture as there’s so much space available now.” Serai’s new home has no toilet, running water and electricit­y. She said she still uses a pit toilet.

The department took down pictures of the official ribboncutt­ing ceremony and handover of the shack from its social media page after public outrage.

In a statement released in response to widespread criticism the department said the donation was a “humanitari­an gesture”.

It said it had partnered with the education department and De Beers to intervene based on the limited resources available.

“We agreed to build a temporary and decent structure to temporaril­y house the family, which they did not have,” it stated.

Officials had gone to the area to also unveil a recreation­al facility at the ER Mocwaledi Intermedia­te school in memory of the late Refentse and agreed to donate school uniform to the school. Officials claimed arrangemen­ts were also made to secure employment for a member of the Serai family.

But Serai denied this. Abahlali baseMjondo­lo activist Mqupheli Bonono slammed the department, saying that moving a family from one shack into another was unacceptab­le.

“It is shocking. We have experience of government playing around with people when it gets to election time. You can’t move a person from a shack into another shack. It shows no dignity,” Bonono said.

He said it was not enough to tell the family that the shack would be a temporary dwelling.

“There are many communitie­s who have been trapped in temporary accommodat­ion for over 10 years.

“They were promised housing but they are still there,” Bonono said.

Land Access Movement of SA chairperso­n Mangwedi Maredi said the shack was not sustainabl­e in the long run. “Why should we talk about temporary things for people who are indigenous to SA. This is not right,” Maredi said. Head of the provincial government communicat­ions in the office of premier Sylvia Lucas, Monwabisi Nkompela, declined to be “drawn into the controvers­y”.

ANC provincial spokespers­on Naledi Gaosekwe also said the party had no stance on the matter.

Repeated attempts by Sowetan to reach Motlhaping were unsuccessf­ul as his phone went to voice mail. Spokespers­on Keitumetse Maticoe directed Sowetan to their previous press statement.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? /DOUGLAS MTHUKWANE ?? Dimakatso Serai, 38, stands in front of the three-room shack she was given by government.
/DOUGLAS MTHUKWANE Dimakatso Serai, 38, stands in front of the three-room shack she was given by government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa