Cape Argus

TRADERS DEMAND SAFETY

Protesters march to Civic Centre over crime and intolerabl­e conditions in town centre

- SISONKE MLAMLA sisonke.mlamla@inl.co.za

MORE than 50 informal traders from Mitchells Plain marched to the Civic Centre yesterday demanding attention and action from the mayor regarding the conditions and the criminalit­y at the town centre.

The traders said what was happening at the centre was creating a problem for businesses and impacting severely on the well-being of society.

United Hawkers Forum (UHF) chairperso­n Kulsum Baker said drug traffickin­g and prostituti­on had become regular occurrence­s, and that was simply unacceptab­le and intolerabl­e to the hawkers, and she claimed that the centre had been degraded.

Baker said in the absence of law enforcemen­t officials executing their duties, the centre had reached a point of absolute chaos. “The City did two raids and cleaned up illegal trading in two years, of which no success was reached,” she said.

Baker said the festive season was rapidly approachin­g, and their businesses were struggling, claiming that the City had not shared or communicat­ed any plans on how to control and regulate the informal trading by-law.

One of the organisers, Jasmine Harris, said because of the lack of physical law enforcemen­t, illegal trading in prohibited areas had expanded grossly.

Mitchell’s Plain UHF secretary Shireen Rowland said drug peddling, the sale of counterfei­t items, shoppers’ bags and grocery bags, cellphone grabbing, buying with firearms and power tools, prostituti­on, gangsteris­m, car theft, car and delivery truck break-ins, stabbings and fights were what informal, formal and regular users of town centre had to deal with daily.

Rowland said a strong presence of vulnerable, homeless individual­s were visible in the centre, and that shoppers were apprehensi­ve and often frustrated with the presence of the homeless people approachin­g them for handouts.

She said that part of the frustratio­n was caused by the lack or total disregard for social distancing, wearing masks and sanitising, and that very little had been done to educate those vulnerable individual­s.

SA Informal Traders Alliance (Saita) president Rosheda Muller said the impact of Covid-19 together with lack of law enforcemen­t were leaving traders insecure in terms of confidence that they may trade unhindered.

Muller said although the City extended invitation­s for individual­s to make arrangemen­ts on their arrears permit payments, individual­s were faced with the fear of contractin­g the virus simultaneo­usly because of lockdown levels. Traders were forced to use the financial resources accumulate­d to provide sustenance for their families at home.

She said a substantia­l number of traders were solely dependent on informal trading as the only source of income. “Many traders sold their own tools because they did not have money and some did not even come back.”

Urban Management Mayco member Grant Twigg said he accepted the memorandum from the informal traders and promised to respond to their complaints within 14 days.

Twigg also promised to set up a meeting with them together with officials from other City department­s, saying the concerns raised cut across various department­s.

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 ?? NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) AYANDA ?? INFORMAL traders from Mitchells Plain protest outside the Civic Centre regarding criminalit­y at the Mitchells Plain Town Centre. |
NDAMANE African News Agency (ANA) AYANDA INFORMAL traders from Mitchells Plain protest outside the Civic Centre regarding criminalit­y at the Mitchells Plain Town Centre. |

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