Daily Dispatch

Informal traders quietly defy ban on selling to houses

- JOSEPH CHIRUME

Informal traders in Nelson Mandela Bay are trying to find a way to survive by quietly going door-to-door selling goods in spite of lockdown rules.

Municipal spokespers­on Mtubanzi Mniki said only informal traders who had permits before the lockdown and who sold uncooked food, could be granted Covid-19 trading permits.

He said permits were not issued to informal traders selling goods house to house as this would be in direct contravent­ion of current lockdown regulation­s.

One trader buys blankets in Johannesbu­rg for resale in Motherwell. He goes door-todoor and gives customers three months to pay.

He has been in the business for 15 years and usually would do brisk sales with the approach of winter, he says. To get round the prohibitio­n on doorto-door selling during lockdown, he goes round with only a brochure. “If I get an order I go back home to collect one blanket at a time.”

He says police are on the watch and there are roadblocks, but “as traders we have to feed our families without spreading

I practice safe social distancing and I always wear my mask when in public. I can’t sit at home while my family is starving

the disease”.

“I practice safe social distancing and I always wear my mask when in public. I can’t sit at home while my family is starving ... There is no money to buy food and we don’t have cash to pay for our rent.”

Another trader who raises and sells chickens in Kirkwood says he used to sell the chickens from a trailer at shopping malls. Now he advertises on WhatsApp or Facebook.

“Clients only come to my house to collect their chicken or I deliver one at a time to their houses,” he said.

A trader from Walmer says she used to buy brooms, mops and other items in Johannesbu­rg for resale in the various townships of Port Elizabeth.

Now she and her friends are buying dishwashin­g chemicals and hand sanitisers from a factory in Nelson Mandela Bay.

She packs the detergents at her house into two-litre plastic containers and delivers the bottles one by one to her clients. She charges R40 per bottle.

“I have a database of all my clients. I phone them for orders.

“I cannot carry more than one bottle.

“If the police find me with more than one bottle I will be in trouble.

“I practice good social distancing and I travel with two masks and a small bottle of sanitiser.

“But I couldn’t just sit and wait till the government lifts the ban on non-essential goods.”

Police spokespers­on Captain Andre Beetge said, “We enforce the regulation­s on lockdown and people should only go out of their houses when doing essential shopping and to seek medication.” —

 ?? Picture: GROUND UP / JOSEPH CHIRUME ?? HOME LABOUR: A trader, based in her house, pours detergent into bottles which she then sells around Nelson Mandela Bay townships.
Picture: GROUND UP / JOSEPH CHIRUME HOME LABOUR: A trader, based in her house, pours detergent into bottles which she then sells around Nelson Mandela Bay townships.

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