The Citizen (Gauteng)

Musina’s lights will stay on

ARREARS: MUNICIPALI­TY OWES ESKOM ABOUT R73M

- Ilse de Lange – ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Court still to rule if paying customers can be held hostage to municipal debt.

The High Court in Pretoria has granted an urgent interim interdict preventing Eskom from interrupti­ng the electricit­y supply to Musina in Limpopo because the municipali­ty failed to pay its outstandin­g debt of almost R73 million.

The interdict, granted by Judge Nomsa Khumalo, will remain in place pending the final adjudicati­on of an applicatio­n by nonprofit organisati­on Sakeliga aimed at ultimately establishi­ng the legal principles for dealing with future power interrupti­ons envisaged by Eskom in similar situations.

Sakeliga chief executive Piet le Roux said the ruling, which was granted without opposition from Eskom or the Musina municipali­ty, paved the way to find a national solution because paying customers should not be held hostage by municipal debt.

“What makes a revision applicatio­n so important is that it could eventually provide a national solution for communitie­s that are prejudiced by defaulting municipali­ties.

“Currently, there are more than 30 towns listed on Eskom’s website that face power interrupti­ons, just like Musina,” he said.

“We cannot allow paying electricit­y users’ power to be cut simply because one arm of the state, a local municipali­ty, does not pay its accounts to another arm of the state, Eskom.”

Roux said in court papers Eskom’s decision merely exacerbate­d unconstitu­tional poor service delivery with an adverse knockon effect on citizens, businesses, the local economy of a municipali­ty and the broader economy of the country.

Sakeliga has clashed with Eskom in court four times over the past year about its strategy to interrupt or cut electricit­y supply as a way to force cash-strapped municipali­ties to pay their debts.

The organisati­on prevented Eskom from interrupti­ng the electricit­y supply to the Kgetlengri­vier municipali­ty earlier this year and also made submission­s as a friend of the court in litigation instituted by Resilient Properties, which owns the Witbank Mall, against Eskom and the Emalahleni municipali­ty.

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