The Citizen (Gauteng)

Vuwani in standoff with government

ULTIMATUM: SA, LIMPOPO GET WEEK TO HONOUR DEAL

- Steven Tau stevent@citizen.co.za

Community demands more than a simple reaction to their memorandum.

Government has been given seven days to implement an agreement relating to the Vuwani demarcatio­n issue, and not to simply respond to a memorandum which was handed over by residents of the village situated near Thohoyando­u, in Limpopo, yesterday.

In May this year, President Jacob Zuma failed to address residents at a planned community meeting, something which angered locals to a point where they booed Cabinet ministers such as Des van Rooyen and Fikile Mbalula, who were forced to leave the area. Security concerns were cited as reasons for Zuma’s non-address.

Residents were expecting a report back from the President, following his meeting with different stakeholde­rs over the demarcatio­n issue.

Residents of Vuwani have for a while now been demanding that the decision by the Municipal Demarcatio­n Board (MDB), to merge their area with Malamulele and other surroundin­g villages, be reversed.

The decision was challenged in court, but was unsuccessf­ul.

Yesterday, residents held a march to the Vhembe district municipali­ty where they handed over a memorandum of demand.

Speaking to The Citizen, spokespers­on for the Pro-Makhado task team Nsovo Sambo said since the meeting the President had with different stakeholde­rs, nothing has been implemente­d.

He said chief among the resolution­s was that Vuwani be rendered services from any other municipali­ty except for Lim 345 (new municipali­ty).

The Presidency was quoted as saying Vhembe district municipali­ty would provide services to the people of Vuwani while a solution on the demarcatio­n issue is being sorted, but – according to Sambo – that has never happened.

“Every time we approach Vhembe district, we get excuses, but nothing happens. Residents are now feeling undermined by a government that does not seem to want to act,” he said.

Sambo said they are now giving both the national and Limpopo provincial government­s seven days to implement and not to just respond.

Asked what will happen should nothing be implemente­d by this deadline, Sambo replied: “There are different ways to respond and it is not only through a total shutdown of services protest action.”

Between last year and early this year, nearly 30 schools were either torched or damaged during the total shotdown of service protest action. –

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