Four children died after eating toxic food from this dumpsite. A year later, it has not been cleared

Yet Mayor promised R4 million to clear dumpsites

| By

The dumpsite near the Rhwayibana home has still not been cleared. Photo: Joseph Chirume

  • More than a year after four children died after eating toxic food from a dumpsite in Nelson Mandela Bay, the site has still not been cleared.
  • The site was cleared by the municipality a few days after the deaths of Asive Rhwayibana, 11, Alizwa Rhwayibana, 5, Alunamda Mqawu, 3, and Zintle Mqawu,10, in January 2020.
  • But the site is a dump again and there is no fence or skip.
  • The municipality did not comment on a promise by the Mayor in March 2020 to spend R4 million on clearing dumpsites.

More than a year after four children died after eating toxic food from a Port Elizabeth dumpsite, the site has still not been cleared.

Asive Rhwayibana, 11, Alizwa Rhwayibana, 5, Alunamda Mqawu, 3, and Zintle Mqawu, 10, died on 5 January 2020. The dumpsite is about 100 metres from their shack homes in NU30, Motherwell. Residents blamed the municipality for the deaths accusing it of failing to provide a secure dumpsite in the area. They also said the municipality should build playing grounds for children to use. The municipality in turn blamed residents for illegal dumping.

A few days later, municipal trucks cleared all the dumpsites in NU30.

But the mother of Asive and Alizwa, Nomthandazo Rhwayibana, said then that she feared that dumping would continue even after the clearing of the site, because no skip or refuse bags had been provided.

And when GroundUp visited the site last week, the dumpsite had still not been cleared away or fenced off.

Rhwayibana said: “It is the municipality’s failure to provide a secure dumping place that caused all this. Had there been a skip bin or had the site been fenced, children could not have accessed it. Another issue is that they resettled us in a place with no playgrounds for children.”

A resident who did not want to be named said the municipality should fence off the area “or convert it into a playing ground in commemoration of the four dead children”.

Nelson Mandela Bay municipality spokesperson Mamela Ndamase said: “The area concerned is serviced by the City with refuse bags regularly provided. They are also serviced with weekly refuse collection.”

But Rhwayibana said: “They cleared it once and never came again. They are lying if they say they are supplying us with refuse bags.”

In March 2020, Executive Mayor Marlon Daniels said he had set aside R4 million to clear all illegal dumping sites in the metro. Attempts this week to get comment on the use of the promised R4 million were unsuccessful: emails and follow up calls to Ndamase, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday went unanswered.

Motherwell Cluster police spokesperson Captain Andre Beetge said the toxicology results of examinations of the four children had not yet been received. “We are still waiting for the Cape Town based laboratory to release them.”

TOPICS:  Government Housing Sanitation

Next:  Activists demand transparency over Covid-19 vaccine roll out

Previous:  No water, no sanitation, no electricity, but for these families this is “Paradise”

© 2021 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.

We put an invisible pixel in the article so that we can count traffic to republishers. All analytics tools are solely on our servers. We do not give our logs to any third party. Logs are deleted after two weeks. We do not use any IP address identifying information except to count regional traffic. We are solely interested in counting hits, not tracking users. If you republish, please do not delete the invisible pixel.