SAHRC RELEASES ITS WATER AND SANITATION REPORT
The South African Human Rights Commission has today released a report on the challenges with regard to the right of access to Water and Sanitation in South Africa.
The report titled: "Water and Sanitation, Life and Dignity: Accountability to the People who are Poor", was handed over to government representatives, Minister of Human Settlements, Ms Connie September and Deputy-Minister of Water Affairs, Ms Rejoice Mabudafhasi at a public launch held at the St Georges Cathedral in Cape Town.
The report is dedicated to the 6-year-old Limpopo pupil, Michael Komape whose parents were in attendance at the launch. Young Michael became a symbol of government's failure in providing proper sanitation in schools when he fell into a pit toilet at his school in Chebeng near Polokwane and died. It is also dedicated to all those who were injured or killed during popular service delivery protests and many South Africans who struggle to live a dignified life.
The report which is a culmination of three years on intensive investigation and hearings across the country, reveals a number of alarming findings, notably that in many provinces there is still a lack of access to any form of water and sanitation infrastructure, which we believe is one of the triggers of the recent violent protests in the country.
The report also found provincial hotspots of complete non service delivery. It was found that these hotspots were the same desperately poor and mostly black regions, townships, homelands, and villages that were disadvantaged under the apartheid era.