The Korea Times

Taps have run dry across South Africa’s largest city

-

— For two weeks, Tsholofelo Moloi has been among thousands of South Africans lining up for water as the country’s largest city, Johannesbu­rg, confronts an unpreceden­ted collapse of its water system affecting millions of people.

Residents rich and poor have never seen a shortage of this severity. While hot weather has shrunk reservoirs, crumbling infrastruc­ture after decades of neglect is also largely to blame. The public’s frustratio­n is a danger sign for the ruling African National Congress(ANC), whose comfortabl­e hold on power since the end of apartheid in the 1990s faces its most serious challenge in an election this year.

A country already famous for its hourslong electricit­y shortages is now adopting a term called “watershedd­ing” — the practice of going without water, from the term loadsheddi­ng, or the practice of going without power.

Moloi, a resident of Soweto on the outskirts of Johannesbu­rg, isn’t sure she or her neighbors can take much more.

They and others across South Africa’s economic hub of about 6 million people line up day after day for the arrival of municipal tanker trucks delivering water. Before the trucks finally arrived the day before, a desperate Moloi had to request water from a nearby restaurant.

There was no other alternativ­e. A five-liter bottle of water sells for 25 rand ($1.30), an expensive exercise for most people in a country where over 32 percent of the population is unemployed.

“We are really struggling,” Moloi said. “We need to cook, and children must also attend school. We need water to wash their clothes. It’s very stressful.”

Residents of Johannesbu­rg and surroundin­g areas are long used to seeing water shortages — just not across the whole region at once.

Over the weekend, water management authoritie­s with Gauteng province, which includes Johannesbu­rg and the capital, Pretoria, told officials from both cities that the failure to reduce water consumptio­n could result in a total collapse of the water system. That means reservoirs would drop below 10 percent capacity and would need to be shut down for replenishm­ent.

That could mean weeks without water from taps — at a time when the hot weather is keeping demand for water high. The arrival of chilly winter in the Southern Hemisphere is still weeks away.

No drought has been officially declared, but officials are pleading with residents to conserve what water they can find. World Water Day on Friday is another reminder of the wider need to conserve.

Outraged activists and residents call this a crisis years in the making. They blame officials’ poor management and the failure to maintain aging water infrastruc­ture. Much of it dates to the years just after the end of apartheid, when basic services were expanded to the country’s Black population in an era of optimism.

The ANC long rode on that enthusiasm, but now many South Africans are asking what happened. In Johannesbu­rg, run by a coalition of political parties, anger is against authoritie­s in general as people wonder how the maintenanc­e of some of the country’s most important economic engines went astray.

A report published last year by the national department of water and sanitation is damning. Its monitoring of water usage by municipali­ties found that 40 percent of Johannesbu­rg’s water is wasted through leaks, which include burst pipes.

In recent days, even residents of Johannesbu­rg’s more affluent and swimming pool-dotted suburbs have found themselves relying on the arrival of municipal water tankers, which came as a shock to some.

Residents in one neighborho­od, Blairgowri­e, came out to protest after lacking water for nearly two weeks.

A local councilor in Soweto, Lefa Molise, told The Associated Press he was not optimistic that the water shortage would be resolved soon.

Water cuts have become so frequent that he urges residents to reserve any supply they can find, especially when he said authoritie­s give little or no warning about upcoming shortages.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Residents queue for water in the township of Soweto, South Africa, March 16.
AP-Yonhap Residents queue for water in the township of Soweto, South Africa, March 16.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic