Cape Times

Work goes on after violence

- Carlo Petersen carlo.petersen@inl.co.za

The project to upgrade 43 500 city rental units started in 2009

REFURBISHM­ENT work on council-owned flats in Manenberg is set to continue this week after constructi­on was halted due to ongoing gang violence.

Good Hope Constructi­on (GHC) – which took over the project from Filcon Projects in June last year – initially stopped working in January.

The City’s Community Residentia­l Unit Refurbishm­ent project has faced many complicati­ons, including alleged corruption related to gang activities, financial issues and gang violence.

GHC chief executive Raziek Rajah said refurbishm­ents at Dina and Eva Courts had again been halted because of gang violence two weeks ago. Forty-eight Manenberg families have been living in shipping containers since August last year.

The City initially told the residents that it would take six weeks for their flats to be refurbishe­d.

Martha Bowman, 35, who has been living in Manenberg all her life, said residents had become disgruntle­d.

“It’s ridiculous. People are now starting to get sick here. It’s going to be another winter in these containers and we want to move back to our homes. The constructi­on just never happens,” Bowman said.

Mayco member for human settlement­s Benedicta van Minnen said the project should be completed in August.

The project to upgrade 43 500 city rental units on the Cape Flats started in 2009, but has since faced many complicati­ons.

In December allegation­s surfaced that gangsters were being hired as constructi­on workers and that another subcontrac­tor employed by the City, identified as Haw & Inglis (H&I), had contracted a secu- rity firm allegedly run by a gang boss.

Van Minnen said: “When the City became aware that H&I was using a constructi­on company as a security provider rather than an accredited security company, registered with the Private Security Industry Regulatory Authority (PSIRA), we requested that our implementi­ng agent, Aecom, remedy the breach.

“PSIRA is a security industry requiremen­t. This was brought to the attention of H&I and they remedied the matter by terminatin­g the services of this company and employed a PSIRA-accredited security company in its place.”

H&I manager Jacques de Ridder has refused to com- ment. Rajah said GHC management had decided to proceed with the project this week. “We will go back to work again on Monday morning. Work will proceed at Eva Court. Some of the workers have been targeted by gangsters because of their gang affiliatio­ns and they will stay at home,” Rajah said.

Van Minnen said: “Any gang affiliatio­ns that may be associated are coincident­al since no specific process is undertaken to check for persons with criminal records or gang affiliatio­ns, and neither is there such a condition in terms of Expanded Public Works Programme requiremen­ts.”

See Letters, Page 8

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