The Citizen (Gauteng)

Destructio­n on our minds

- Sipho Mabena

The vandalism of Zithobeni stadium is not an isolated occurrence as vandals and thieves run amok, destroying public infrastruc­ture as we watch helplessly.

We appear to be a sick and destructiv­e nation that puts no value in public facilities, but one thing is certain: our public facilities, especially in townships, are fast being reduced to heaps of rubbish and we are all to blame and should be ashamed of ourselves.

My heart sank as I toured the destroyed Zithobeni Stadium, a public facility near Bronkhorst­spruit in Gauteng, on which R44.3 million of taxpayers’ money was spent.

When I heard about the sorry state of the facility on the phone, I did not anticipate the eyesore I was about to be confronted with.

I could not believe the heap of rubble that this newly-built facility had been reduced to. It remains inexplicab­le why the Tshwane municipali­ty would spend so much money on constructi­ng the stadium, only to abandon it and leave it to the mercy of thieves and vandals to strip it bare.

As I made my way into the stadium, a few spectators dotted the grandstand­s, watching a soccer practice on the soccer pitch, with its once lush lawns fast making way to dusty, bare ground.

After the stadium was completed in April last year and the constructi­on company left the site, the Tshwane metro bizarrely withdrew security at the facility.

Thieves and vandals wasted no time in moving in, ravaging the multimilli­on-rand facility in just over a year.

Security will be reinstated, the metro proclaimed after The Citizen asked questions about the abandoned facility, but this is of little comfort and a case of too little, too late as almost everything of value has been stripped or destroyed.

With no explanatio­n for forsaking the facility, the municipali­ty seems to rest on the “likelihood” that insurance would cover the costs of the damage.

I can bet the last cent of my newspaperm­an’s salary that the authoritie­s did not know or even care about the ensuing destructio­n, as confirmed by the metro that it was not even aware of the extent of the damage.

My probing of the matter revealed that there was shabby planning of the constructi­on, despite buckets of money having been spent on profession­al fees.

As a result, the facility was never handed over to the community on completion as there were outstandin­g issues with town planning.

But the vandalism of Zithobeni stadium is not an isolated occurrence as vandals and thieves run amok, destroying public infrastruc­ture as we watch helplessly.

Street signs are ripped from the ground and their poles used for washing lines or for fencing, lampposts are pulled to the ground and stripped of their cables and the lights sold to tarven and spaza shop owners.

Bridge barriers have long gone, manhole covers are sold for scrap and electricit­y cables dug out of the ground, destroying electricit­y infrastruc­ture.

The dead are not spared the onslaught, with cemeteries unashamedl­y stripped of their steel perimeter fencing.

We are a nation in need of serious introspect­ion on the value of public property that we actually pay for and need to protect.

We are a nation in need of serious dialogue on our sick and destructiv­e tendencies of reducing our facilities to heaps of rubbish.

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