Human waste litters Mountain View – and City of Tshwane has no plans to fix it soon

City of Tshwane says families living in the informal settlement will be moved when it finds land.


Human waste litters the ground in Mountain View informal settlement in Mamelodi, Tshwane. The settlement, built on rocky land between two housing developments, has hardly any toilets, no electricity, and no water. The municipality says the families living there will be housed when suitable land has been found – and in the meantime it’s not going to fix Mountain View.

Families desperate to leave

Mountain View is situated in the middle of Mamelodi Ext 17 with RDP houses, and Mahube Valley Ext 1. Both have tarred streets, running water and electricity, and flush toilets inside the houses. In Mountain View, families live in shacks, some built on a steep rocky slope. Residents told GroundUp that they are so desperate to leave that they are even prepared to stay in another informal settlement.

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Florence Shirindza said she and her four children battle to get around in the rocky area. Where she lives, there are three flush toilets built by residents outside the shacks, connected by residents to the sewerage system in Ext 17.

“Each toilet is used by more than 100 people and pipes often get blocked,” said Shirindza.

“Other people relieve themselves wherever they can on the ground, during the night. There is always a bad stench of human waste outside my shack. What worries me the most is that I live in a bad place that is next to two beautiful places that have houses, water and electricity.”

Stench of human waste

Shirindza said some people have built pit toilets in their small yards. Others often request permission to use the toilets of residents of Ext 17.

Shirindza makes a living by looking after children of working residents of Mountain View or other parts of Mamelodi.

When GroundUp visited Mountain View recently, the stench of human waste was unbearable.

Mountain View informal settlement human waste
Nando Nyawuse says he wants to be moved – even to another informal settlement. Photo: Warren Mabona/GroundUp

Resident Nando Nyawuse said he has to watch his two young children and make sure they don’t fall on the rocks. “The government must move us to safe land, even if it is another informal settlement.”

All the residents who spoke to GroundUp said they have to walk and fetch water in other parts of Mamelodi every day.

City of Tshwane spokesperson Lindela Mashigo said Mountain View started in 2012 and was recognised as an informal settlement in 2017. At that time, he said, the City had counted and marked shacks, and 2,662 families had been registered.

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He said the City is in the process of finding suitable land as part of addressing the issue of informal settlements in Mamelodi, including Mountain View.

“Like other metropolitan cities, the City of Tshwane is experiencing a huge demand for affordable housing.” Mashigo said the housing backlog included more than 500,000 people in 227 informal settlements, 200,000 people on the National Housing Needs Register, more than 85,000 people living in backyard rooms and more than 24,000 in old hostels.

He said the land that the City is in the process of finding will address backlogs in all these categories.

Meanwhile, Mashigo said, the City does not have any plan to provide water and toilets to Mountain View residents.

This article was republished from GroundUp with permission. Read the original article here

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