Daily News

‘It feels like they do not care’

- AMANDA KHOZA amanda.khoza@inl.co.za | This article was first published by New Frame.

THE chairperso­n of Kwazulu-natal’s House of Traditiona­l Leaders, Inkosi Phathisizw­e Chiliza, has called for an investigat­ion into claims that food parcels are not being distribute­d fairly in the province and that street traders, who are desperate to sell goods, have to pay for permits to do so under the national lockdown due to Covid-19.

This comes after several complaints from residents in different villages, many of them deep rural and remote.

“We need the process to be transparen­t because people want to know how food parcels are allocated to families,” said Chiliza.

“At the moment, it looks like food parcels are being given to people they (government officials) know. That is why we are calling for the government to work with the amakhosi (traditiona­l leaders) and the tribal authority on this matter, because we need to make sure that the process is fair.”

Chiliza says the manner in which food parcels are being issued will lead to some families going hungry.

“As we speak, people are already hungry. And if they see corruption in the process, we are going to have serious problems. But we have asked the member of the executive council for social developmen­t, Nonhlanhla Khoza, to intervene and investigat­e the matter urgently.”

Several residents across the province have accused government officials and ward councillor­s of stealing food parcels meant for poor residents. According to a report in The Daily News’s sister newspaper, The Mercury, complaints have been received from people living in the Midlands, Pietermari­tzburg, Durban, Dannhauser and Nquthu. It says the spokespers­on for the provincial Department of Social Developmen­t, Mhlabunzim­a Memela, has admitted that the department is aware of the allegation­s.

Chiliza said government officials should bear in mind that voters would remember these issues come the next election. “These are the same councillor­s that are going to go back to communitie­s to beg for votes next year during the local government elections, and they forget that they won’t have these food parcels to bribe communitie­s. The people who were getting food parcels will not care anymore and so they (the councillor­s) will depend on the very people they are sidelining today,” said Chiliza.

Regarding the issue of permits for street traders, who need to get them from their ward councillor­s and municipali­ties, Chiliza said: “When you look at the issue of selling work permits, how can you sell someone a permit when they are trying to feed their families? Sometimes those people make as little as R20 a day, working hard selling onions.”

Lerato Ntombela, a resident of Dlovinga village, in Izingolwen­i on the South Coast, says food parcels have not reached the area. “We also heard that one of the councillor­s in my ward was selling permits for R600 to informal traders so that they can go out and work,” said Ntombela.

Ntombela also alleges that food parcels are being issued on “a firstname basis”. “It’s about who they know. You don’t just get food. Inkosi yethu (our local inkosi) does not help us with anything and there is nothing we can do.”

What worries Ntombela is that the majority of people in the village are unemployed and depend on government grants to survive. “We understand the situation (pandemic), but it feels like they do not care about the community. Aren’t they supposed to be assisting people living in rural areas? They have their own agendas and, sadly, people are going to go hungry. They are already hungry.”

Zakhele Mnkwanka, a resident of Ozwathini village in Bhamshela, 90km north of Durban, says it is not fair that the government expects people to continue washing their hands and practising good hygiene when there is no water in the village. “We never have water. It is very rare to see water tanks in the area. When we tell the councillor about the issue, he tells us that the water pump is broken and blames the Ilembe District Municipali­ty for failing to provide water.”

According to calculatio­ns done between May 2 and 8, the Ilembe district had the second-highest level of infection in South Africa, with an average of 18 active cases per 100 000 people.

Mnkwanka, a 53-year-old father of two, says there is nobody to turn to for help. “Children are sitting at home and there is no food to eat. So they turn to the guava trees just to make sure that they have something to fill their stomachs. They are going to get sick and will need to be taken to the hospital. Then what must happen?”

His only comfort lies in the fact that the villagers look after one another.

In Makhasanen­i village, near Melmoth, pastor and land rights activist Mbhekiseni Mavuso agrees that little has been done to assist rural residents, living on land administer­ed by the Ingonyama Trust, on behalf of the Zulu people. In his area, the lack of transport and an increase in criminal activity during the lockdown have left people feeling helpless.

“Although vans that transport people to and from town do not have permits to operate during lockdown, we still use them because we don’t have a choice,” he said. “If you want to go to town, you have to hire the entire van for about R500. It will take you to town and then wait for you while you do your shopping.”

He said complaints about crime to the police, local headman and inkosi had fallen on deaf ears. “We have lost hope. Ever since lockdown started, we have been under attack. Criminals are breaking into our homes and when you go and report the matter to the police, they tell us that we should not be outside during lockdown. They turn us away and when we catch the criminals, they send us home because of physical distancing.”

Mavuso claims that residents recently caught five criminals and took one of them to the headman, who called the police. But when the police arrived, they allegedly threatened to arrest the headman for an illegal gathering of people.

In Maphaya in Jozini, northern Kwazulu-natal, 62-year-old resident Linah Nkosi claims that she recently saw food parcels being transferre­d from a municipal vehicle to an unmarked vehicle, its destinatio­n unknown.

“There have been so many promises to uplift the community during the pandemic, but no one has benefited from that. It’s blank, nothing is happening here. I even had to buy my family sanitiser because no one is giving them out in the community. I also had to buy one for myself, so that I can take it with me when I go to town, and it is expensive,” said Nkosi.

She also complained that people in Jozini were not adhering to the lockdown regulation­s. “When people go to town to collect their monthly grant payments, it is packed like nothing has happened. All the shops are open and people drink alcohol all day long, even though the bottle stores are closed.”

But in Mondlo, about 20km outside Vryheid in the Zululand District Municipali­ty, grandmothe­r Favorite Phenyane, 67, remains hopeful. She says she is happy to see the police enforcing the lockdown regulation­s.

“When lockdown began, the soldiers were here, but I do not see them anymore because everyone is respecting the lockdown regulation­s. Other than that, things seem to be operating as normal,” she said.

An issue that does concern Phenyane is that people in Mondlo have not received food parcels. “We are watching people on TV getting food parcels and we are not getting any. We do not know why,” she said.

The Kwazulu-natal Department of Health says concerns like these should be addressed by the Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs, which says it is the responsibi­lity of the Department of Social Developmen­t.

Co-operative Governance spokespers­on Senzo Mzila said: “Remember that Covid-19 is a security issue in terms of lockdown regulation­s, and the amakhosi have played a role in spreading the message of compliance. Social developmen­t has been dealing with and spearheadi­ng the social relief distress issue, and municipali­ties have their own unique interventi­ons in place.”

With regard to councillor­s allegedly selling permits, Mzila says people with evidence of such conduct must report the matter to the police, so that it can be investigat­ed.

“Councillor­s signed codes of conduct which compel them to act in the interest of the municipali­ty so they cannot sell permits. That is illegal.”

He also said the government was doing all it could to provide water where it was lacking.

Mosa Moshabela, the dean of the University of Kwazulu-natal’s school of nursing and public health, says the virus has exposed the fault lines that already existed, in terms of governance in the province.

“If service delivery is slow and you have a condition that requires a rapid response, and you don’t have systems to do so, you are not going to be able to provide it now. You should, in fact, have had a system all along that makes sure that people get informatio­n and resources immediatel­y.”

Moshabela said it was not a case of the government not providing services during the pandemic, but rather “people being deprived of services, period”.

He was also concerned about proposals to apply different lockdown levels to different parts of the country, because people would go in search of employment where they thought they could get jobs, even in cities with high numbers of Covid-19 cases.

“This will increase the risk of transmissi­on. It will transport the disease to rural areas, and that is what we should be more concerned about,” he said.

 ??  ?? TRADITIONA­L leaders and tribal authoritie­s have been asked to investigat­e the matter of food parcels not being distribute­d fairly in Kwazulunat­al, especially in the rural areas.
TRADITIONA­L leaders and tribal authoritie­s have been asked to investigat­e the matter of food parcels not being distribute­d fairly in Kwazulunat­al, especially in the rural areas.

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