For 18 years they have been living in an abandoned school - and now they're finally being relocated
Some families who have been living in abandoned school buildings in New Brighton, a township in Port Elizabeth, will finally be relocated after nearly 18 years.
The families say they had started to lose hope when the temporary accommodation plan became their permanent home. They were first moved to classrooms at Lwandlekazi High School after their shacks burnt down at Block 40 on December 15 2001. There are now about 27 families living at the school.
When GroundUp visited, the smell of faeces and urine was pungent in the school yard, which was visibly unkempt with thick, tall and wet grass. Every day, people queue for water at the only working standpipe situated behind a row of toilets which residents said smell and are often blocked.
Resident Nombulelo Mtwebana, 34, said: “We arrived here on December 15 2001 with our mother after our shacks were burnt down at Ezivrandini area in Red Location. The municipal officials asked us to come and stay at this school temporarily while the municipality was busy relocating and building RDPs [houses] in the area.”
The first RDP houses were built in 2013, but Mtwebana’s family was not moved there.
“Living at the school is dehumanising,” she said. “We are a family of 14 sharing one classroom. The classroom is divided into four rooms with planks in order to have privacy."
Nobuntu Sonjani said they were given the good news this week that some of them would be relocated to Motherwell, and the fire victims would move back to Block 40.
Paul Mbewane, chairperson of the Red Location Development Committee, confirmed the relocation. He said three of the six fire victims had agreed to rebuild their shacks at a municipal site where 172 RDP houses are being built.
“We have asked Andile Mfunda from human settlements to organise temporary structures for them,” he said.
He said 10 more beneficiaries will be relocated to municipal sites in Motherwell NU30, while eight other people from the Block 40 group will be relocated elsewhere. The families will be relocated by January 2020, he said.
Ward 15 Councillor Celia Mtati has blamed delays in the project on “indecisiveness among the residents”.
Residents were given three housing choices which included a single men’s quarters, semi-detached and high-rise houses. The residents chose the high-rise homes, she said.
“When the municipality started to build these high-rise houses, they changed their minds and asked for normal RDPs. The process was then delayed for more than five years. Also, the human settlements department ran out of funds to build more houses,” she said.
Mtati said the municipality chose not to provide services at the school, fearing that other people would move into the school as well.
Mayoral spokesperson George Geleba said the ward councillor and the human settlements committee would continue to engage with the residents.
“They are in the process of relocating the families to the land,” he said, noting that the “final touches” will be completed in January.
Article originally published on GroundUp