Tensions between communities reach “boiling point” over electricity in Port Elizabeth
Mayor Bobani promises electrification of informal settlements and removal of all illegal connections
Nelson Mandela Bay Mayor Mongameli Bobani has promised that the electrification of several informal settlements will resume next week after the project stalled.
Bobani told residents that the municipality had R200 million for electrification.
On Wednesday, Bobani first met with about 300 residents of formal houses in Ikamvelihle and the informal settlement of Asinavalo, which has about 500 shacks. He later met with about 150 residents from the informal settlement of Nomakanjani in Ikamvelihle, which has about 2,000 shacks. Its residents had spent the past two weeks protesting, blocking the Addo road with burning tyres.
Residents asked the mayor why it was taking so long to finish electrifying their shacks when electricity poles and cables were installed early this year in the two settlements.
Andile Lungisa, Mayco member for infrastructure and engineering, had told GroundUp months ago that “all settlements are going to be connected as soon as we finish everything. The contractors are already on sites and we are liaising with communities.”
Xolani Sineli, a resident of Nomakanjani, said, “I hope this area will be electrified and pave the way for the construction of proper houses. I applied for a house in 1994 and reapplied in 2004 but nothing has materialised yet. There is no legal electricity connections here and it’s very dangerous … We suspect corruption with the housing officials. The Hawks should investigate.”
Sineli is unemployed and lives in a shack with his wife and five children.
Nombulelo Tshali, of Asinavalo, said, “We are being accused by people from formal houses of causing power outages by illegal connections. The tension between house owners and residents of informal settlements is reaching boiling point.”
A resident of a formal house in Ikamvelihle, who did not give his name, said power outages caused by illegal connections had left him without electricity for three weeks.
Bobani promised the removal of all illegal connections affecting formal houses starting Monday.
Bobani said, “The technicians have not been able to access the area for the past two weeks because of the violent protests in the area. There are also occasions when they are attacked and robbed while fixing faults. We discourage that because that delays the programme.”
“Work will resume on Monday to finish electrification process that was started early this year. We want to eliminate dark corners so that criminals will be flushed out and arrested,” said Bobani.
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