IFP slams ‘chaos’ of recent grant payouts

Government should also consider following the route of other countries and mass sanitise public areas and transport.

Sir – From reports the IFP has received so far, it is clear that widespread disarray continued to characterise the early SASSA grant payout process last week, which was meant to prioritise and assist the poor and South Africa’s disabled citizens during this unprecedented but necessary lockdown period. But more worrying is the fact that the vulnerable had to rely on public transport to ferry them to the pay points, where social distancing is not being adhered to and where no sanitisers or masks were available.

These realities stood in stark contrast to the strict lockdown measures announced by President Ramaphosa less than a week ago, and has put at risk the most vulnerable in our society of contracting Covid-19.

The IFP believes that more must be done to protect vulnerable SASSA grant recipients during the next payout cycle, to run at the end of next month when the Covid-19 virus is expected to be at its most active in our communities.

The IFP calls on the leadership of the Department of Social Development and SASSA to meet as a matter of urgency, to start planning the interventions that could be put in place in the next two weeks to avoid similar scenes from unfolding. Such interventions could include paying the elderly and vulnerable at home, while those who are healthier and can travel to pay points are allowed to do so but under the strict conditions of being asked to adhere to social distancing, while wearing gloves and masks at these pay points.

Government should also consider following the route of other countries and mass sanitise public areas and public transport facilities during this time of lockdown.

Furthermore, we call on Social Development to urgently make known where food banks are being established to assist families in need. We thank those retailers and service providers, who with regards to the disbursement of SASSA grants have taken the necessary precautionary steps to assist beneficiaries, especially the elderly.

The IFP calls on the Provincial Departments of CoGTA to liaise with the Department of Water and Sanitation and district municipalities, to fast-track the provision of water access and infrastructure, particularly in rural communities who have been hit hardest by the drought and debilitating infrastructure.

Water is at the heart of the hygiene protocols to fight the coronavirus; in the period of the current lockdown, our people are handicapped in leaving home to fetch water far from their homes.

VF Hlabisa MPL – IFP


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