Rats eat the lunch, snakes eat the rats - and everyone else is fed up at Pinetown courts
Staff at Pinetown Magistrate’s Court say they will demonstrate on Tuesday over the "disgusting" conditions there, including a rat infestation which has attracted snakes to the building.
"I saw a snake chasing a rat," one staff member, who is not allowed to speak to the press, told TimesLIVE.
On top of that toilets don’t work and the stench of sewerage is ever present, sources said.
Public Servants' Association KZN manager Claude Naicker confirmed that the working conditions at the court were dire.
"The entire court building is in a dire state of disrepair. Our 60 members at the court, including magistrates, prosecutors, interpreters and cleaners, will take part in the demonstration. If their demands are not met, then they will decide on what steps to take next," he said.
He confirmed that there was a major rat infestation.
"We have had reports that documents and people's lunches were being gnawed at.
"I know of one instance where a dead rat was discovered in a prosecutor's office."
Attorney Jacques Botha, who frequents the building, said: "It is appalling and abysmal".
"It is generally filthy. Fungal spores are spewing out of air conditioners. The toilets are disgusting. There are missing toilet seats and cistern lids. Vandalised hand driers. Soap dispensers are missing.
"Carpets are rotting from water damage. There is a pervading stench which one magistrate told me is a design flaw because they didn’t properly ventilate the sewage system so the smell permeates some of the courts."
Botha said while he had not personally seen rats or snakes "there have been many sightings" and two magistrates had told him they had seen a snake.
Naicker said that meetings had been held on Friday and Monday where "staff were told that there was no budget to rectify things".
"But we have put the ball back in the Department of Justice’s court to come up with a plan. We are also reporting the situation to the Department of Labour for further investigation."
The justice department's KZN regional head Pat Moodley said the matter was brought to her attention last week by the PSA.
"The court was registered for a repair and renovation project with the Department of Public Works but was unfortunately not funded.
"From the region, we are attending to the cleaning and pest control.
"We have also identified old furniture for immediate disposal and repairs to the flood damaged ceilings that we are going to undertake."
She said she was still waiting for a more complete report from the director of court operations.
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