South Africa

In photos: Langa, one of the worst places to live in Cape Town

By Mary-Anne Gontsana

  • Residents of Langa’s “zones” still live in dilapidated hostels from the apartheid era.
  • There has been no development in Zone 17 and residents live without formal electricity and use buckets as toilets.
  • Some residents have been on the housing waiting list since the dawn of democracy.
  • The City of Cape Town says it “is working on a Langa redevelopment plan” but shared no details.

“Our parents lived in this poverty. We are living in this poverty. And now our children are living in this poverty,” says Nomlibo Siko.

Siko is one of many people living in dilapidated hostels in Langa Zone 17. She has been here since 1993. She shares a small room with her three children. To free up space, she stores her mattress and bed base outside her room when they are not in use.

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Siko showed us a red card she was given in 1997 when she applied for a house.

“Every time I enquire about my application I get the same response, that I am still on the housing database,” she said.

Nomlibo Siko with her mattress stored outside the room. Picture: GroundUp/Ashraf Hendricks

Desperate conditions in Zone 17 highlight residents’ long struggle

When we visited Zone 17, the streets had pools of grey stagnant water. Stormwater drains were blocked, and the pavements were littered with rubbish. Two large skips were piled high with garbage. Illegal electricity connections ran in all directions above one’s head.

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Opposite Siko’s room is the room of Nomfihlo Dyantyi, 84, who has lived here ever since she rented a bed at the hostel in 1974.

“I don’t know how for so many years we have managed to live like this. This is not how any person should be living. There is no electricity, no toilets, and as you can see this place is filthy. Our rooms leak and there is no space in them,” said Dyantyi.

She showed us a crumpled copy of her housing application from 1993. “I just want to show you that I have applied for a house. But look at me – I am old, I know I will leave this earth without ever getting a house,” she said.

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Eighty-four-year-old Nomfihlo Dyantyi has been living in a room in a Zone 17 hostel since 1974. She has been on the housing waiting list since 1993. Picture: GroundUp/Ashraf Hendricks

Challenges persist in Langa’s Zone 17

The apartheid era Zones in Langa were numbered 17, 18, 19, 20, 2324, 25 and 26, and within these Zones were hostels, named Morris, Cape Foundry, Dura, Blue Line, Vineyard and Slingsby. Already in 1993, in her book, A Bed called Home, Mamphela Ramphele described the Zones as “by far the worst accommodation among the council-built hostels in Langa”.

“There are times when the rubbish is not collected, and you can imagine how much dirtier it gets when that happens,” said community leader Fundulwazi Langa.

“As the leadership of Langa, we have had numerous meetings with the community and with the City of Cape Town regarding the development of the Zones in Langa. To date, we have had two marches here, one in 2016 and the other last year in April, where we highlighted our grievances about the lack of housing and development in the Zones. We demanded that the City make the housing budget public as well.”

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“Older people and people with disabilities live in these Zones. But some of the Zones like 17, have no toilets. How is that even possible in this day and age?” said Langa.

Community leaders in Langa say the Zones say the sewer system is dysfunctional, creating pools of filthy, stagnant water. Picture: GroundUp/Ashraf Hendricks

Sanitation crisis highlights urgent need for development

Siko said they were relieving themselves in buckets and emptying these in the now blocked stormwater drain.

“Every time they [City officials] come to clean or fix the drains, they see shit because that is where we dump our shit. Sometimes this place even smells like shit, because we live in shit,” said Siko.

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Asked a number of questions regarding development, upgrading plans and the lack of toilets in Zone 17, Mayco Member for Human Settlements, Carl Pophaim only said: “The City is working on a Langa redevelopment plan which includes the zones. Affected stakeholders are being engaged by the Directorate on a way forward on the redevelopment of Langa. Some services are being provided by Public Housing.”

Elizabeth Mqhingwana, 75, shares her small room with six family members, including an infant. Her knees are giving in and she has to limp around on crutches. She said she applied for a house many years ago, but lost her documents during a fire in 2011. Picture: GroundUp/Ashraf Hendricks

This article was originally published by GroundUp.

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