Zandspruit protests abate

The KZN area loses close to 50 percent of its purified water through pipe leaks, theft, neglect and wasteful use.

The KZN area loses close to 50 percent of its purified water through pipe leaks, theft, neglect and wasteful use.

Published Jun 13, 2012

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Protesting residents at the Zandspruit informal settlement were retreating on Wednesday afternoon after blocking roads and throwing stones at cars.

“The police have managed to restore calm, but they are still monitoring the situation,” Johannesburg metro police spokesman Chief Superintendent Wayne Minnaar said.

There was a heavy police presence in the settlement by late afternoon as residents returned from work. Access to certain areas was being controlled as a precautionary measure.

The protest, which started around 3.30am, saw locals burning tyres, blocking roads such as Beyers Naude Drive, and pelting passing cars with stones.

Residents said the reason for their protest was lack of service delivery. A woman who only identified herself as Nokuzola said residents were tired of living in shacks and receiving poor sanitation, water and electricity services. She said many people in the informal settlement had died due to shack fires.

Minnaar said Beyers Naude had been reopened, but he advised motorists to use alternative routes such as Hendrik Potgieter or Malibongwe roads. - Sapa

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