The Citizen (KZN)

Makhanda residents cry ‘enough’

- Eric Naki

Makhanda, formerly Grahamstow­n, is a shadow of its formerly glorious self and is on the brink of becoming a ghost town.

Residents of the sleepy rural university town, better known as the City of Saints, are collecting signatures for a petition to national government to intervene and stop a water crisis that has brought the area on its knees.

At least 20 000 signatures will carry the weight of their demands.

Residents and civil society structures are battling against deteriorat­ing service delivery, endemic crime and now a water crisis in the Makana local municipali­ty.

At the forefront of the battle is the Makana Citizens Front (MCF). The movement believes the water shortages are as a result of corruption and mismanagem­ent of funds in the municipali­ty, which is under administra­tion.

Attempts to get comment from Makana mayor Yandiswa Vara and municipal manager Phumelele Kate failed.

MCF, which won five seats during the 2021 local government election, is famous for its assertive demands for accountabi­lity for expenditur­e and service delivery by the executive and officials.

Its chair, Lungile Mxube, said the widespread patronage that occurred during the tenure of late executive mayor Zamuxolo Peter was behind the municipal collapse.

It had opened the floodgates of corruption and internal rot that saw infrastruc­ture collapse and maladminis­tration, including improper and unbudgeted appointmen­ts.

He alleged during Peter’s term, the infrastruc­ture funding was redirected to pay salaries, the purchase of expensive cars and the siphoning of municipal funds into the pockets of individual­s.

The extent of the graft was subject of a probe by the Kabosu forensic investigat­ion which, among others, found at least 81 ghost workers were on the municipal payroll.

Mxube said despite the Kabuso report recommenda­tions, the ghost workers were still being paid by the municipali­ty with no remedial action taken.

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