Khayelitsha volunteers roll up sleeves to clean up uncollected rubbish
Fed-up community members from W Section in Khayelitsha, Cape Town have rolled up their sleeves to clean up uncollected rubbish strewn across their streets. The group of about 100 residents gathered at the weekend and split into smaller groups to clean up discarded plastics, rotting food and even human waste. The volunteers claim the contractor […]
Fed-up community members from W Section in Khayelitsha, Cape Town have rolled up their sleeves to clean up uncollected rubbish strewn across their streets.
The group of about 100 residents gathered at the weekend and split into smaller groups to clean up discarded plastics, rotting food and even human waste.
The volunteers claim the contractor hired by the City of Cape Town stopped cleaning the streets over two months ago because of a dispute with the City. Residents complain that the smell around their homes is unbearable and that the area is infested with flies.
Before the clean-up project, residents went door-to-door collecting donations. They collected R400 and were able to buy 13 rolls of rubbish bags. Each volunteer brought their own gloves, spade, rake and wheelbarrow to carry the rubbish.
GroundUp saw volunteers clearing away rotten food, cardboard, electrical appliances, nappies, old car parts and stagnant water.
Community leader Sandile Nzwana said: “The City is not getting to the source of the problem, which is not employing people through its Expanded Public Works Programme. People from this community should look after cleaning services in this area because contractors care more about profits than the areas they serve.”
He said part of the aim of the clean-up was to educate other residents about illegal dumping and littering and promote recycling. “This place is an eyesore,” he said.
Volunteer Nonkosi Phanginxiwa told GroundUp: “We decided to clean because the City is failing us. For months waste has not been collected. We have been complaining about the rubbish for too long and it seems the City only cares about us when it is election time.”
Phanginxiwa said the community had tried several times to alert the City about the piles of dirt around the area but to no avail.
City of Cape Town spokesperson Racine Edwardes had promised to respond to our questions sent last week but had not done so by the time of publication.