Mail & Guardian

Make a pledge to protect public property

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The I Care We Care campaign has received support from the Portfolio Committee on Infrastruc­ture D e v e l o p me n t a t the Gauteng Provincial Legislatur­e.

The campaign has also been endorsed by the members of the executive council for health, education, and social develo p me n t , r e s p e c t i v e l y : Q e d a n i Mahlangu, Panyaza Lesufi and Nandi Mayathula Khoza, who also attended the meeting.

Chairperso­n of the committee, Lindiwe Lasindwa, told the meeting: “As public representa­tives, it is our responsibi­lity to protect public property. We therefore support the campaign”.

Lesufi said that as a sign of his support for the campaign he had already signed the I Care We Care Campaign when both the department of education and the department of infrastruc­ture developmen­t launched a new model of a primary school in Ga-Rankuwa in August. He said both department­s would as of August 2016 be launching a new school every month and also asking the underlying communitie­s to protect the new schools.

Launched by the Gauteng Provincial Government in Bekkersdal, Westonaria on July 13 2016, the campaign seeks to raise awareness about the consequenc­es of the destructio­n of public property that has been sweep- ing through the province and the country, leaving many communitie­s deprived of key social infrastruc­ture.

Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t MEC Jacob Mamabolo told the committee: “Through this campaign we are building a culture whereby communitie­s join hands to protect public property. We know apartheid denied us as a people, ownership of assets, and we also that know public property is still treated as elitist and that it is seen as a bargaining tool when people are angry with the government. Together we must arrest this problem before it is too late.”

He made a impassione­d plea for communitie­s across the province to embrace the value that public assets bring to them and they should be conscious of the fact that the destructio­n, looting and vandalism of public property impoverish the very people that these assets are meant to serve.

The Gauteng Provincial government will continue visiting various communitie­s as part of the Ntirhisano Programme and will provide pledge books to garner signatures of one million people who are committed to working with authoritie­s in ensuring that the destructio­n of public property is a thing of the past.

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