Last week's rain wreaked havoc in several parts of the township, flooding houses, as frantic residents tried to keep the water at bay.
Last week's rain wreaked havoc in several parts of the township, flooding houses, as frantic residents tried to keep the water at bay.
One of the hardest hit areas was Ronaskaap Squatter Camp, near J Street, where residents had to drill holes and dig furrows to drain water from their flooded houses.
Resident Lindelwa Ncula took the Grocott's Mail on a guided tour of her family's five-roomed house. Every room was flooded and furniture floated around.
"The water leaks through the floor and the walls. Not so much the roof, but, I have put out basins, big dishes and buckets," said Ncula.
She said they'd had to drill holes into the wall to let the water out.
"It's about time the government built us houses," she said. Norman Rooi, a bricklayer who has lived in the area for 15 years, didn't report for work yesterday at Dup Meyer Construction yesterday, because he had to drain water from his flooded house.
"I've been living under these conditions with my mother until she passed away last August," he said. The water leaks through the floor and the walls.
Another resident, Xolani Sandi, has lived in the area for the past eight years and said whenever heavy rains fell, his family's house got flooded.
When Grocott's Mail entered the house, there was not a dry spot and all the appliances and furniture were floating in ankle-deep water.
"This house started to flood last week and I used basins and buckets, as you see. But today I also went to the [Makana] fire department, where I was given a sheet of heavy duty plastic to cover the most vulnerable parts of the wall and roof," Sandi said.
The heavy rains also destroyed several shacks in eThembeni informal settlement in Extension 7 on Thursday, with residents frantically scooping bucketloads of water out of their homes.