Saturday Star

Fanning the flames instead of dousing them

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THE COUNTRY has been agog and aghast at the destructio­n wrought by the runaway fire on Table Mountain that began last Sunday. Many people were devastated by the loss of priceless artefacts from UCT.

In typical Twitterati style, others were happy that (a) the university was being decolonise­d by fire, even though most of the irreplacea­ble texts were Struggle ones or (b) that the university was getting what it deserved for kowtowing to the Fallists.

Up north, Johannesbu­rg had its own fire. The devastatio­n at Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital was extensive, but the coverage was muted in comparison to the footage of tireless Cape firefighte­rs and helicopter pilots dumping buckets of water from the air on Table Mountain.

Thankfully, no lives were lost at Charlotte Maxeke. Probably because of the dearth of immediate and tangible tragedy, coverage of the blaze was almost eclipsed by the far more extensive and photogenic mountain inferno.

For people living in Johannesbu­rg watching the harrowing footage on their cellphones and TVS – or watching Millennial­s declare themselves safe on Facebook from their homes in Milnerton – the unspoken question was what happens if we have a fire here?

If 2018 is anything to go by, when three firefighte­rs tragically perished when the old Bank of Lisbon building next door to The Star caught fire, the answer is dire. Johannesbu­rg has been beset by a fire engine and equipment crisis for years – three years in fact before that towering inferno.

We have 30 fire stations and at last count, depending on who you believe, between four and seven functionin­g fire engines deployed between them. If there is a fire, we have to hope that the fire brigades in Pretoria, Krugersdor­p or even Kempton Park are available when the siren goes. Alternativ­ely, we just have to hold thumbs that the fire burns itself out and doesn’t jump from building to building in the CBD – or dwelling to dwelling in our packed informal settlement­s.

The bitterest of ironies is that the issue is not that there’s not enough money to buy vehicles – the council set aside R500 million in its last attempt. The issue is not that there aren’t companies right here in Gauteng, not overseas, who can build and supply the equipment – three companies bid for the Red Fleet Tender. The issue is not that there haven’t been numerous attempts to procure the equipment.

The issue instead seems to be (a) political infighting in the city council and (b) whenever contracts have been awarded, they’ve been so tainted with corruption, they’ve been set aside by the court – as happened this month.

It’s an incredibly apt snapshot of South Africa in 2021, pandemic included. We can see the answers, we know what we have to do, but we can’t agree to put our difference­s aside and do what’s right for every single one of us. Or someone somewhere needs to have their palms greased – even when it’s literally a case of life and death.

The only good news is there’s a local government election on October 27.

Choose wisely.

 ??  ?? KEVIN RITCHIE
@Ritchkev
KEVIN RITCHIE @Ritchkev

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