Sowetan

Electricit­y theft sparks war between haves, have-nots

Tit for tat as shack dwellers petrol bomb suburb’s bonded houses, while their shacks are also set alight

- By Bongani Nkosi ■ nkosib@sowetan.co.za

In a classic war between the haves and have-nots, shack dwellers and residents of bonded houses turned against each other in Mahube Valley, east of Pretoria.

Vandalised water meters and shattered windows on homes along Steve Biko Street told a story of the violence that plagued the area yesterday.

Even more chilling was that several houses were petrolbomb­ed while people were inside. But many of the home owners managed to escape serious injury. Some shacks in the informal settlement were also razed to the ground, with their property inside damaged the shacks too.

Both sides pointed fingers at each other as instigator­s of the violence.

The shack dwellers illegally occupying municipal-owned land said their formal housing neighbours started burning down their shacks on Wednesday night.

The damages to bonded homes stood as evidence that if indeed the bondholder­s started the fight, shack dwellers retaliated by marching on Steve Biko Street and hurling petrol bombs and stones at homes and damaging water meters.

On the other hand, residents of the formalised houses community accused the shack dwellers of attacking their homes without provocatio­n.

Electricit­y was at the centre of the battle. Bondholder­s insisted that they want the shack dwellers removed because they steal their electricit­y.

Illegal connection­s by the shack dwellers caused Mahube Valley to go without electricit­y for three days.

“They are stealing electricit­y, that’s the main problem,” said Sipho Sikhosana. “Their [illegal] connection­s cause electricit­y to trip all the time.”

Sikhosana said the shack dwellers were wrong to build the shacks so “close to us”.

Florence Motise and her two children, aged three and 16, had already gone to bed when a petrol bomb was thrown into their house at about 10pm.

“I heard a loud bang and when I rushed to the lounge I saw fire. Luckily I managed to run out with the children. I thought we’d die,” said Motise.

The children have been sent to stay with a relative.

“They are too traumatise­d to go to school.”

Her husband, Joseph Motise, drove from work in Mpumalanga to attend to the situation.

“What have we done?” the distraught husband asked.

Matlakala Sebela, 52, was in church when she received a call that her shack was burning. She found all of it razed to the ground.

“I’ve lost everything. What hurts me the most is that I wasn’t even using their electricit­y but a Primus stove.”

Sebela conceded her neighbours were connecting power illegally.

“This fight is about electricit­y. They complain that they can’t cook because of us, but people this side also need to cook,” said Sebela who arrived in the area in July last year from Polokwane, Limpopo.

“We want the municipali­ty to intervene; they could either give us electricit­y or land.”

Another shack dweller, Nelly Maimela, said people made illegal connection­s because electricit­y was a necessity.

“It’s not that we’re demanding free things. But no one is prepared to stay in darkness.

“We have children going to school. They need electricit­y to study too,” said Maimela, a former backyard dweller. She moved into the shack area as the R1 000 rent she previously paid was “unaffordab­le”.

Solly Msimanga, City of Tshwane mayor, told Mahube Valley residents the municipali­ty was trying to get a court order to remove the shack dwellers.

“We found alternativ­e land for them. They said it’s too far, they won't move there. We’re saying today after this mess we can’t negotiate.”

‘ ‘ I ran out with the children. I thought we’d die in the fire

 ?? /PHOTOS THULANI MBELE ?? Matlakala Sebela in front of her shack which was burnt to ashes. She arrived in the area from Polokwane, Limpopo, last year.
/PHOTOS THULANI MBELE Matlakala Sebela in front of her shack which was burnt to ashes. She arrived in the area from Polokwane, Limpopo, last year.
 ??  ?? Property was burnt to ashes when informal settlement dwellers clashed with residents of Mahube Valley. The residents are accusing the shack dwellers of connecting electricit­y illegally causing power outages and high costs.
Property was burnt to ashes when informal settlement dwellers clashed with residents of Mahube Valley. The residents are accusing the shack dwellers of connecting electricit­y illegally causing power outages and high costs.

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