Parents want compensation after child's death on Makana playground
The parents of a four-year-old child who died, apparently after a jungle gym fell on him in a playground in Riebeeck East, want compensation from the Makana municipality.
Lisekhona Bouwer died on December 28.
His father Khayalethu Bouwer said the family had complained for years about the dangers of the playground. “Our son would still be alive if our municipality was concerned about the safety of our children. We have been complaining for years about the dangers of that playground. Our kids have no better place to play than there.
“The jungle gym was removed from an old crèche by the municipality when building a library. Instead of putting it in a safe place they left it lying around, then kids took it into that playground.”
Bouwer said the day his son died there were many children playing including all of his. He said that the children described the jungle gym falling on Lisekhona’s head. “When I arrived he was already dead.
“My front door is facing straight to that playground. Every day I am reminded of that incident. The police tapes are still there and kids are no longer playing there.”
Bouwer said his other children, aged 7 and 9, “always talk about how their brother died”.
“They never received counselling. The only thing the municipality did was to send their condolences and pay for the funeral of our son. They should compensate us for their negligence,” Bouwer said.
His wife, Shelley Botha, who is pregnant, said Lisekhona would have started school this year. “My son was robbed of an opportunity to live.”
The child’s aunt, Nomakhaya Bouwer, said: “Since 2015 we have been reporting this playground. But all our cries had fallen on deaf ears. E-mails and letters were sent to the municipality by the DA office but the officials never acted. The whole playground is damaged and is posing a danger to our kids.
“Now my nephew is dead because of the municipality’s negligence.”
DA PR councillor Cary Clark said: “The municipality were fully aware of the issue and were negligent. I have been reporting this problem since 2015 and even raised it in council. Absolutely, the family should be compensated for their loss. It won’t bring their son back but it will send a very strong message to the municipality and others like it not to ignore the communities they are supposed to look after.”
Ward councillor Mavis Pieters (ANC) said the mayor had assured her that all the playground equipment would be removed before the end of this week.
But she declined to answer other questions regarding compensation and building of a new playground, referring GroundUp’s questions to municipal manager Moppo Mene, who said the legal unit would respond. No response had been received by the time of publication.
Provincial police spokesperson Capt Khaya Tonjeni said an inquest docket had been opened and the detectives were waiting for postmortem results.
- This article was first published by GroundUp