Authorities on-scene in Sergeant Street in Somerset West, where vagrants set up camp along the river banks back in March. Photo: DistrictMail & Helderberg Gazette archive/Jamey Gordon


I’m writing to you as one of the residents living along the Lourens River, specifically the area between Main Road bridge and Island Park.

On a daily basis we breathe in toxic fumes from burnt plastic, rubber, and metal. We are disturbed by sounds of chopping and clanging during the day and often at night. We can’t enjoy sitting in our gardens because of the stench of human faeces and urine, and because we know our gardens aren’t private.

It’s not unusual to come across the unfortunate sight of prostitutes plying their trade right outside our fences and walls. Even worse, we’ve all heard the terrifying sounds of women screaming. Many have seen women being beaten. We’ve seen men being beaten.

We hear angry shouting and swearing. We contact the police and, most often, there are no sirens, no police officers entering the green belt to help these people.

Drunken shouting and chanting aren’t uncommon either. Nor is the smell or sight of people smoking tik and marijuana. We look out of our gardens or windows and see the rubbish in the river and along the paths and embankments. Clothes and blankets are left to dry on the bushes, obscuring nature. We see the structures and fires, and at times, trees being burnt, whether by accident or on purpose. Some of us have been threatened at gunpoint and knifepoint.

And although people are finally taking notice it has taken a lot of work from residents to get a response. Residents have raised awareness and logged calls for years now as these are known problem areas.

Many of us have had ward councillors insinuate that we’re making it up or that we’re mistaken, despite the many calls logged and photographic evidence to the contrary. All the while areas on the more affluent side of Main Road are tended to and fenced off. Things are moving really slowly here.

Like you, we want a safe and healthy place to stay, a good place to raise our children. We want to enjoy our homes and our town. We don’t want to worry about what we’re breathing in, what our children are breathing in. Many of us experience respiratory irritation, as do our children and pets. This is especially problematic for those with existing health conditions. We also want to sleep peacefully without all the shouting and noise.

I am not unsympathetic to how hard the jobs of our politicians and police are. I understand some of the red tape involved and that there are people lobbying for the rights of the homeless. I want to make it clear these vagrants are not homeless. There have been organisations and social workers who have approached them and offered them help.

There have been family members who have tried to convince them to come home. The sad fact is that these people would rather live through the indignity of homelessness, prostitution and physical threats of rapes and beatings to take tik. Drugs do seem to be at the core of the issue when it comes to people who choose to remain homeless.

I don’t know how to help people who don’t want to be helped. But at the moment these vagrants who don’t pay their rates and taxes, who don’t pay rent or a mortgage like the rest of us, have far more rights than those of us who do what is legally required of us.

I don’t know the answers. But I don’t believe that it’s right that our health and safety be put at risk on a daily basis. This is not opportunistic crime. This is a case of people not wanting to abide by the laws and who care nothing about those around them. They make as much noise as they want and pollute the river, fields and air. And if you try to stop them, or confront them, they aren’t scared to pull a weapon out.

Something needs to change. If people are constantly committing crimes (and yes, we have had thieves and drug dealers hiding in the green belt) and infringing bylaws should they not be prosecuted? If they are violating our rights shouldn’t they be taken to task?

We are tired of living in these conditions. What people choose to do with their lives is their decision. But these people are negatively affecting our lives every day. And to sell our places isn’t an option. Our properties have lost a lot of their value because of these issues.

We need people in power to take notice and do something. At the very least, the grass and bushes could be cut down so vagrants have no place to hide. And while we would rather be free to enjoy the beauty of the river path no-one can do that any more. Not with the threat to our safety and vagrants bathing totally naked in the river and using those same river banks as toilets. Fencing the areas off needs to be put back on the table. There has been a big improvement in the areas along the river that have been fenced off.

We can’t keep letting meeting after meeting result in zero action. This matter needs awareness and for the local government to know that we are serious.

Cheanné Lombard,

Email

The City of Cape Town’s Mayoral Committee member for Water and Sanitation, Councillor Zahid Badroodien, responds: “The Water and Sanitation Directorate provided the following comments during the last Sub-council Activity Day meeting on Thursday 17 August where several important issues were raised.. Fencing the Lourens River will not be allowed as this will negatively impact the hydraulic flow of the river and does not align with the City’s vision for livable urban waterways. Fencing would also restrict public access to the designated Non-Motorized Transport (NMT) routes along the river.. Vagrants located along the river and on the island (middle of the Lourens River) require coordination with the City’s Law Enforcement and Anti-Land Invasion Unit(ALIU). These islands will be removed. . The removal and cutting of trees are the responsibility of the City’s Recreation and Parks Department. . It was suggested that River Wardens could form part of the Lourens River Conservation Society to report issues such as dumping and vagrancy to the relevant departments. However, their assistance would primarily be available during daytime hours and not at night.”Law Enforcement spokesperson Wayne Dyason responds: “The City’s Area Law Enforcement staff conduct operations, and respond to complaints relating to this particular area.“The most recent intervention was on Monday 13 September, where Section 56 notices were issued in respect of the City’s by-laws. “Law Enforcement officers can only enforce the bylaws, but cannot force any person to vacate the area. “The PIE Act prevents the City from moving persons without a court order, and it has been established that there has been a proliferation of tented camps in public open spaces due to the ‘relief’ from evictions that was imposed on organs of state during the Covid-19 lockdown. “The City is working to approach the courts for eviction orders where our offers of social support are being persistently refused; however, given the scale of occupation across the metropole, and the time that legal processes take, this is not an overnight solution.”City Mayoral Committee member for Community Services and Health, Councillor Patricia van der Ross, adds: “From a social development perspective, the Department’s Street People Programme Unit visits this site frequently as it is a well-known hotspot. “The individuals all refuse assistance when it is offered by the team. “To cite a few examples, space was secured at a shelter as requested by one of the individuals. When the team arrived to take her to the Somerset West shelter – the shelter of her choice – she refused. “A couple residing at that hot spot, making a living from recycling, claims to be relocating back to the Eastern Cape. “They, however, refuse to allow the team to help them with the process. The team has engaged the individuals on numerous occasions about their behaviour and the impact it has on the residents in close proximity. One of the couples subsequently moved their structure a little further away from the houses, but the behaviour continues to cause problems.”

You need to be Logged In to leave a comment.

Gift this article