Daily Dispatch

Boreholes renovated for two villages

- TEMBILE SGQOLANA tembiles@dispatch.co.za

We now have enough water to drink and also give to our struggling animals

The days of walking long distances in search of water are over for the residents of Bacclesfar­m and Tentergate villages near Komani.

This is, in the main, thanks to the Pakistan expat communitie­s’ reviving of the two villages’ boreholes.

The boreholes will bring much-needed relief to villagers as they have been struggling to access water in the grip of an ongoing drought since 2015.

The situation improved when members of the Pakistan Muslim Community and Border Kei Chamber of Business started cleaning the boreholes in the two villages.

They also did regular checks on the boreholes before installing solar panels to revive them.

Ward councillor Nkululeko Ngcefe said the six villages in his ward all depended on boreholes for water.

“People walked long distances to get water as the boreholes experience­d problems,” he said.

“There are boreholes that have not been working for years and these people are now reviving those boreholes to help bring water to the village.”

Ngcefe said Mbekweni High School in Tentergate had also struggled without water to flush its toilets.

“After the contractor finishes cleaning and reviving the boreholes in the village, they will come and dig a new borehole at the school.

“This borehole will help as the school toilets have not been working since there has been no water to flush them.

“The borehole will help as a backup so that toilets are accessible anytime at the school.

“When all the boreholes are operating in all six villages, we will have enough water to drink and give to our animals as they have been struggling since the drought started,” he said.

“We will have a meeting with the community, and ask them to look after the solar panels as if they are their own.

“This initiative has brought joy and hope to the people of the two villages who have been struggling with thirst for so long,” he added.

Border Kei Chamber of Business administra­tor Adre Bartis said the Pakistan Muslim community had initiated a number of community developmen­t initiative­s, this time focusing on bringing water to badly affected drought areas.

“This initiative will bring much-needed relief to people,” she said.

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? GIFT OF LIFE: Bacclesfar­m and Tentergate village residents can access water again thanks to the South African Pakistan Muslim community having renovated boreholes in the area.
Picture: SUPPLIED GIFT OF LIFE: Bacclesfar­m and Tentergate village residents can access water again thanks to the South African Pakistan Muslim community having renovated boreholes in the area.

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