The Citizen (Gauteng)

Power play in suburbs

PETRIFIED: TSHWANE OFFICIALS HELD HOSTAGE BY COMMUNITY MEMBERS

- Thapelo Lekabe – thapelol@citizen.co.za

Metro police called to assist but chased away.

The City of Tshwane says officials from its energy and electricit­y department were held hostage in Mamelodi East on Tuesday by angry community members, who forced them to disconnect electricit­y at another suburb.

The community was apparently up in arms after a local substation in the area tripped due to overloadin­g on the grid after load shedding.

City spokespers­on Selby Bokaba said teams were at the Mamelodi Hinterland substation attending to a service interrupti­on when some community members held them hostage.

The angry residents then forced them to switch off the electricit­y to Nellmapius extensions 22 and 24.

“The petrified officials had no choice but to comply for safety reasons,” Bokaba said in a statement yesterday.

He declined to mention the number of employees who were held hostage when contacted by The Citizen.

He said officials from the Tshwane Metro Police Department were summoned to assist, but were chased away.

“A decision was taken to hastily withdraw all the teams from sites in Mamelodi for safety reasons to prevent the community from forcing them to perform further illegal operations.”

Bokaba said the situation in the area remained tense and the traumatise­d officials were reluctant to go out and attend to service interrupti­ons in extensions 6 and 10, specifical­ly out of fear of being kidnapped or harmed.

He warned that Tuesday’s incident would affect service delivery in parts of Mamelodi East.

A meeting was scheduled yesterday between city officials and councillor­s in the affected areas to resolve the community’s issues.

“The city strongly condemns the criminal behaviour by certain communitie­s in any part of the municipali­ty and the perpetrato­rs of this despicable behaviour should know the consequenc­es of their actions – those officials would simply refuse to go and service those communitie­s in the event of a service interrupti­on.”

The city said it was concerned about the increasing incidents of harassment and robbery of officials while on duty in Nellmapius, some parts of Soshanguve and now in some sections of Mamelodi.

“Service interrupti­ons relating to water and electricit­y occur from time to time due to a slew of factors, such as theft of cables, vandalism of infrastruc­ture and illegal connection­s.

“The daily load shedding imposed by power utility Eskom has compounded the problem, as the fragile electricit­y infrastruc­ture is not designed to be switched on and off frequently.”

In March, a City of Tshwane electricia­n was severely beaten up by angry community members while attending to a power outage in Soshanguve.

The official had to be admitted to an intensive care unit.

Officials will simply refuse to service communitie­s

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