Mail & Guardian

George building collapse: Our focus is workers, not their nationalit­y

- Umamah Bakharia

Rescue workers are drilling through the rubble in an attempt to rescue more people at a collapsed apartment building in George after eight workers died.

The George municipali­ty confirmed on Thursday afternoon that 37 people had been rescued from the rubble at 75 Victoria Street, leaving 44 still unaccounte­d for, after the multi-storey building collapsed shortly after 2pm on Monday.

The number of workers at the site was revised from the initial 75 people reported on Monday to 81, the department said, after it received records from project developer the Neo Victoria Developmen­t Group.

“We haven’t been in contact but what we have heard is that they [Neo Victoria officials] came on site with their attorney, appointed by their insurer, but they did supply us with the names of the workers after the building collapsed on Monday,” George mayor Leon van Wyk said.

On Tuesday, Van Wyk confirmed that the project developer for the building was the Neo Victoria Developmen­t Group, which employed Liatel Developmen­ts as the contractor.

He said that the Neotrend Group had submitted plans to the George municipali­ty on 22 December 2022 and these had been approved in July last year.

Responding to queries from the Mail & Guardian, Neo Victoria Developmen­t said it would co-operate with investigat­ions, however, its priority was “to attend to victims of the disaster”.

“As landowners and developers, we have committed to work with the investigat­ing teams to analyse and evaluate whatever is needed as soon as practicall­y possible,” Neo Victoria’s spokespers­on Chanel Fourie said.

But the department said when it visited Neo Victoria Developmen­ts’ offices in George, as part of its investigat­ion, they were locked.

The department has since issued a subpoena.

“The day we arrived, we tried to make contact with the client — up until today there has been no response from that particular person, so we will proceed with our legal process,” the labour department’s chief investigat­or David Esau told a press briefing in George on Thursday afternoon.

At this stage, it is “not about foreign nationals but about the rights of workers”, said Minister of Employment and Labour Thulas Nxesi after speculatio­n in the media about whether the workers were foreigners.

“It is not about foreign nationals or nationals — it is about the human beings whose rights have to be protected, regardless of their nationalit­y,” Nxesi said at the briefing.

The labour department said it had involved the department­s of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs; human settlement­s and internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n in its investigat­ion.

Although the minister refrained from answering questions from the media about the nationalit­y of the workers, he said his department would be engaging with the Mozambique, Malawian and Zimbabwean consulates.

The minister added: “We don’t want to speculate; we will leave everything to the investigat­ion and, once the investigat­ion has been able to expose the facts, we will talk about that.”

Nxesi said a compensati­on fund for the workers would be discussed after the investigat­ion by the police and the labour department had been completed.

Western Cape Premier Alan Winde said the province had appointed an independen­t structural engineer who had already started investigat­ing the cause of the building collapse.

Western Cape MEC Anton Bredell said those responsibl­e needed to be brought to account.

“I’m grateful that there are different clusters that are doing this investigat­ion, so that we can ensure and make sure that investigat­ion is independen­t, and that we will not leave any stone untouched to get to the bottom of this, and the people responsibl­e can be held accountabl­e,” he said at the press briefing.

Meanwhile, rescue workers said they would continue working around the clock to retrieve any workers who were still stuck under the rubble.

“The internatio­nal standard is three days for a rescue operation; we will work until the weekend to identify where people are trapped,” said Colin Deiner, the chief director for the Western Cape provincial disaster management services.

 ?? Marais/die Burger/gallo Images via Getty Images
Photo: Jaco ?? Rubble: Search-and-rescue operations continue after a four-storey block of flats under constructi­on in George collapsed on Monday.
Marais/die Burger/gallo Images via Getty Images Photo: Jaco Rubble: Search-and-rescue operations continue after a four-storey block of flats under constructi­on in George collapsed on Monday.

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