There was widespread controversy earlier this year when it emerged that 50 households in the low-income settlement of Makhaza (Khayelitsha) had been provided with unenclosed toilets, leaving residents deprived of their rights to health, safety and dignity. The City of Cape Town, governed by the DA, claimed an agreement had been reached with the community. It entailed the commitment to build an external toilet for each home, as opposed to one for every five homes, provided each household built their own enclosures (walls and roofs). However, many were not aware of this arrangement and, in some cases, were unable to afford the material with which to do so, forcing them to use uncovered toilets in full view of the passing public.
The source of the widespread media attention was an ANCYL complaint to the Human Rights Commission and public outrage, which culminated in an apology from DA leader Helen Zille on Human Rights Day.
The Social Justice Coalition has been at the forefront of a campaign focused on the delivery of clean and safe toilets to the people of Khayelitsha's informal settlements. As such, we were encouraged to see an issue which is seldom discussed (given its private nature), but fundamentally important to one's daily routine, making mainstream headline news. We hoped it would prompt debate around the complex issue of delivery of sanitation services, in particular, and the broader issue of improving service delivery through better consultation with communities, in general. Unfortunately, this has not transpired.
At the time, we emphasised that the Makhaza incident was not unique to the DA, or the city - it has happened while other parties (including the ANC) have governed it, and certainly happens in other municipalities across the country. We also pointed out that Makhaza was the tip (albeit a very illuminating one) of the proverbial iceberg. Millions of South Africans and hundreds of thousands of Capetonians continue to have no, or very limited, access to basic sanitation facilities. We urged those in government and in all leadership positions not to use the Makhaza incident as political cannon fodder, but to sit down together regardless of political affiliation and with cool heads attempt to resolve the problem.
Almost four months later, Makhaza is back in the headlines, but for all the wrong reasons. We have lost focus of the real issue at hand - residents in Makhaza and elsewhere who continue to live without adequate sanitation facilities - and are, instead, embroiled in yet another political skirmish. In an attempt to make a complex and heavily diluted situation somewhat simpler, this article will focus on three groups of actors who have been central to what has transpired over the past few months.
The first is the Cape Town Municipality, headed by Mayor Dan Plato. The mayor has repeatedly claimed that the city has done "nothing wrong" in Makhaza - an assertion which becomes immediately preposterous to anyone who has witnessed someone in the area sitting on a toilet in the open because he or she can't afford to pay for it to be enclosed. The city has also routinely refused to acknowledge broader deficiencies in sanitation provision in the city. In March, the city issued a statement in which it claimed that "there is access to toilets in townships". Last year's city annual report noted that "100 percent of households have access to basic water and sanitation". This is patently untrue, as anyone who has ventured into Khayelitsha will know, and indeed, according to the city's own data, which shows that just over 45 000 households don't have access to basic sanitation. Recent research by Water Dialogues has shown that the true figure is probably closer to 100 000 households.
The Water Services Act states that the municipality or local council is directly responsible for ensuring access to water services. We do not expect this to happen overnight, but the failure of the city to take responsibility has only heightened tension in Makhaza, and antagonism towards local government. Its failure to acknowledge that the problem exists on a systemic level hinders discourse on how this challenge can best be addressed.