Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Cape Town’s water crisis highlights the city’s rich-poor divide.

Tensions highlight gap between rich and poor

- By Bram Janssen

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — “Day Zero” is approachin­g as South Africa’s showcase city of Cape Town prepares to turn off most water taps amid the worst drought in a century. Tensions among the 4 million residents are highlighti­ng a class divide in a country with one of the world’s highest rates of inequality.

Cape Town, a top internatio­nal tourist destinatio­n, has both sprawling informal settlement­s and high-income oceanside neighborho­ods. Some say poorer residents are unfairly blamed as concerns rise over wasting precious water. The military is prepared to help secure water collection points if “Day Zero” occurs.

The Associated Press is exploring how residents are coping as water restrictio­ns tighten in an attempt to avoid the possible shut-off in midApril, and it spoke with researcher­s about where the water usage problems lie.

Kirsty Carden with the Future Water Institute at the University of Cape Town pointed to the city’s leafy suburbs. “It has been in the areas where people have gardens, they have swimming pools and they are much more profligate in the way that they use water, because they’re used to the water just being, coming out of the taps,” she said.

Some residents appear to be changing their ways, she said, but “there have been problems in the more affluent areas where people are just, ‘We’ll pay for it.’”

About a quarter of Cape Town’s population lives in the informal settlement­s, where they get water from communal taps instead of individual taps at home, Carden said. “And there are always pictures of running taps and broken fixtures and ‘Look at the leakage’ and all the rest. But the reality is that those 1 million people out of a population of 4 (million) only use 4.5 percent of the water.”

 ?? Bram Janssen The Associated Press ?? Residents line up to fill containers with water from a spring on Friday in Cape Town, South Africa. The nation is suffering its worst drought in a century.
Bram Janssen The Associated Press Residents line up to fill containers with water from a spring on Friday in Cape Town, South Africa. The nation is suffering its worst drought in a century.

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