Minister intervenes to calm Sterkspruit

MINISTER RICHARD BALOYI

MINISTER RICHARD BALOYI

INTERVENTION by Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister   may have calmed  tempers and delayed an Eastern  Cape town’s potentially disruptive  mass protest.

Baloyi visited Sterkspruit on  Sunday, ahead of a planned 10-day  protest action from today which  residents said could see a complete shut down of the town.
The protests are being led by  the Sterkspruit Civic Association,  which claims to represent the  town’s residents. They are demanding secession from Senqu  Municipality, alleging a lack of service delivery and corruption.
But Baloyi’s visit may have  calmed some tensions after he  promised to set up a task team to  investigate corruption, lack of service delivery and viability of a new  municipality.
By late yesterday afternoon,  Sterkspruit residents and the  association’s leadership were still  meeting to decide whether or not  to continue with the planned  protest.
“Yes we had a meeting with the  minister yesterday [Sunday] and  he later went on to address the  people,” said Mcebisi Mgojo, chairman of the Sterkspruit Civic Association.
He said Baloyi promised to come  back again on Thursday, with the  Eastern Cape premier Noxolo  Kiviet and local government MEC  Mlibo Qoboshiyane.
Baloyi’s spokesman Ngamola  Nkuna could not be reached for  comment at the time of going to  press, however, the department  had released a statement saying  the minister was going to meet  with the civic organisation and the  business community.
Qoboshiyane’s spokesman  Mvusiwekhaya Sicwetsha confirmed there was a plan to meet  the residents.
DA provincial legislature leader  Bobby Stevenson released a statement on Sunday expressing his  concern about what he called a  volatile situation.
“We fear it could burst into  flames and there could be serious  loss of life and damage to property  as the Sterkspruit Civic Organisation embarks on a 10-day rolling  protest action to shut the town  down from Monday,” read the  statement.
The party also claimed there  had been no service delivery in  the town since November last year  following a similar protest because  of alleged intimidation.

However, Mgojo denied the municipality or its employees were  being prevented from offering services in Sterkspruit.
He said they had resolved to do  their own cleaning because the  municipality wasn’t doing it,  adding the workers come only  when they feel like doing so.
The municipality could not be  reached for comment as municipal  manager Mxolisi Yawa’s phone  went unanswered yesterday. —  aphiwed@dispatch.co.za

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