‘We don’t have streets, but during elections you’ll find big black cars driving between our shacks’ – Mdantsane shackdweller

Vuyelwa Mgengqeni says four ward councillors have led the area, but not one has managed to get houses for them.


Vuyelwa Mgengqeni, who is 67, has to cross a railway line to the nearest bushes whenever she wants to relieve herself.

She has been living in a shack for more than 20 years in the Zwelibanzi Soga informal settlement in Mdantsane, East London. She says she has lost hope that she will ever receive a RDP house, GroundUp reports.

Mgengqeni said repeated promises had been made to residents at election time, and Buffalo City Mayor Xola Pakati had visited the area in 2016 and 2017, but nothing had changed.

“We do not have streets, but I can tell you, during election campaigns, you will find big black cars driving between our shacks,” she said.

Mgengqeni said she was one of the people who started the informal settlement in 1992. Today, there are close to 400 shacks, but only eight toilets. Some residents have built themselves pit toilets. Others, like Mgengqeni, use the bush.

They say not a single resident is registered for RDP houses and the municipality has told them they would not be registered until a housing project had been approved for the area.

When GroundUp visited the settlement, Mgengqeni was crossing the railway line on her way back to the shack she shares with her six children and grandchildren.

“Everyday, I cross this railway line to the bushes to relieve myself. I know it is dangerous, but I do not have a choice. Toilets are far from my house and sometimes you will go to the toilet to find people queueing,” she said.

Mgengqeni said four ward councillors had led the area, but none had managed to get houses for them.

Electricity was installed in 2017.

“I’m tired of living in this shack, but it looks like I will die here waiting for a house,” she said.

Another resident, Nompumezo Mbali, said she had been living in the settlement since 1993. She has built a pit toilet next to her home, but it is full.

“The toilets supplied by the municipality are very few and are far from most houses,” said Mbali.

“Always when we want to raise our grievances, we write a letter to the municipality, but we are ignored,” she said.

Community leader Simphiwe Makhambi showed GroundUp a number of letters sent to the municipality asking for houses.

Ward councillor Mpumelelo Fini said a land surveyor would be sent soon as part of a process to build houses in the area. But residents were sceptical.

Asked by GroundUp when the surveyor would be sent, Fini told us to send questions to municipal spokesperson Samkelo Ngwenya.

Questions about housing and toilets in the settlement sent to Ngwenya on Monday, November 11, were not answered, although he promised to respond by November 13. On November 21, another spokesperson, Luxole Komani, confirmed that a surveyor would be sent to the area, but did not say when.

Republished from GroundUp

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