The Citizen (Gauteng)

Gangsteris­m puts man in wheelchair with long wait for a home

- Mary-Anne Gontsana

Lwando Sigaqa, 28, is paralysed from the waist down.

He has been using a wheelchair since 2014, when he was shot during a robbery in which he was involved.

He lives in a shack in Khayelitsh­a’s Taiwan informal settlement.

“I have done a lot of bad in my life and made many bad choices, but I have bettered myself and have changed.

“My only wish would be to receive a house and to be used as an example for the young kids who think choosing the path of crime that I chose is the way to a good life,” says Sigaqa.

“I grew up in Zone 24 in Langa. My parents separated and we moved with my mother to Strand.

“She was struggling to make ends meet. I started hanging out with friends, experiment­ed with drugs, alcohol, became a gangster and eventually dropped out of school after finishing Grade 7.”

He was shot in the arm and back during a robbery in 2014. He woke up in hospital under police guard.

“I had no idea what had happened to me. All I know is that when I came to the hospital, I was in so much pain and I could not feel my legs,” he recalls.

After spending seven months in hospital, Sigaqa was sent to prison where he spent six months for armed robbery.

“It was the toughest time in my life. Being a gangster did absolutely nothing to better my life, it just put me in this wheelchair.”

He lives with his sister and her three-month-old baby girl. He used his disability grant to extend the shack to make space for them. He tries to be as independen­t as possible, but depends on her.

The fear of being homeless nags at him, he says. He also worries about being unable to escape if there is a shack fire.

Sigaqa’s wheelchair is a three-wheeler and is difficult to manoeuvre in the shack.

“I have burnt myself using the kettle and trying to cook… I was bitten by mice while I was asleep.

“I obviously couldn’t feel anything. I just woke up in the morning and saw blood all over my feet and sheets.”

He uses a bucket for a toilet and it is uncomforta­ble and awkward.

He applied to the provincial department of human settlement­s for housing last year, with the help of a social worker.

Department spokespers­on Marcellino Martin said people with disabiliti­es, the elderly and child-headed households were prioritise­d, but they had to be on a waiting list for at least three years – though the MEC could make an exception in certain cases.

The department had a backlog of more than 550 000 families.

Republishe­d from GroundUp

Being a gangster did nothing to better my life, it just put me in this wheelchair.

Lwando Sigaqa

 ?? Picture: Mary-Anne Gontsana ?? DREAMER. Lwando Sigaqa lives in a shack he does not own in Taiwan informal settlement, Khayelitsh­a.
Picture: Mary-Anne Gontsana DREAMER. Lwando Sigaqa lives in a shack he does not own in Taiwan informal settlement, Khayelitsh­a.

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