Daily News

Residents clean their own area

- MINENHLE NDWANDWE Minenhle.ndwandwe@inl.co.za

THE community of Merebank and ethekwini Municipali­ty worked handin-hand to clean up the area and plant trees to improve the neighbourh­ood.

The Merebank Community Foundation (MCF) said the partnershi­p with the municipali­ty’s parks and recreation department was something they had wanted for years.

An agreement with the municipali­ty was made on Mandela Day. The MCF was allowed to partner with the municipali­ty, and bought palm trees. The municipali­ty in return provided flowers and helped to cut down trees.

The aim of the parttnersh­ip was to revive the community and make it “alive again”.

The community had many trees, which allowed thieves to remain undetected while attacking people.

Premilla Deonath, chairperso­n of the MCF, said the environmen­t had no longer been safe for residents, and that businesses were ceasing to operate there because of regular break-ins.

“We want to make the community healthy and earthy again, this place used to be beautiful and we wanted to bring that back.

“We want people to feel like they are in umhlanga when they come here and most importantl­y, we want them to feel safe here,” Deonath said.

Deonath expressed her gratitude to the municipali­ty for allowing the MCF to partner up with them, and she said the partnershi­p would be life-changing for residents.

She hoped that the area would return to the good state it was once in.

DA PR councillor Sithembiso Ngema said this was a positive start, after the community had, for a long

time, attempted to bring to the attention of the parks and recreation department “how filthy the place was”.

He said the efforts of the municipali­ty were appreciate­d, and he hoped that it would consistent­ly assist the community.

Ngema said the parks in the area had been in a poor state, and not a place of sanctuary for people, as they were supposed to be. They had become a gathering place for robbers.

“This is truly a right step in a better direction, this place had become unbearable for anyone to live in. There used to be playground­s where the youth used to keep busy but now all of that is gone and they are focused on drugs, rather,” said Ngema.

He added that the municipali­ty, going forward, needed to respond quickly to such issues because, in terms of social cohesion, a park was a place where people go when in distress, but residents had not been able to do this because they feared for their safety.

This initiative would create job opportunit­ies as it would allow people to again run food stalls.

Naledi Masuku, who opened her food stall business last year, said she had been robbed twice. She said she hoped the initiative would bring about change.

“People are always getting robbed here, I hope this is going to be a good one because sometimes I can’t even get customers because no one wants to come to a dangerous place.

“With the cutting of trees, I think it is going to be better because the robbers will not have a place to hide.”

 ?? | TUMI PAKKIES ?? THE community members of Merewest have partnered with the municipali­ty to revive their neighbourh­ood. They planted palm trees and flowers at the Merewest Park in Merewent. African News Agency (ANA)
| TUMI PAKKIES THE community members of Merewest have partnered with the municipali­ty to revive their neighbourh­ood. They planted palm trees and flowers at the Merewest Park in Merewent. African News Agency (ANA)

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