Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Zuma faces charge
10 August 2010, 09:20
By Angelique Serrao
President Jacob Zuma and the Minister of Environment and Water Affairs, Buyelwa Sonjica, have been charged under Section 151 of the National Water Act in a bid to get them to answer for rampant pollution in the Hartbeespoort area.
Environment and Conservation Association chairwoman Nicole Barlow filed the charges at the Hartbeespoort police station yesterday.
Captain Enoch Legoete at first refused to open a case against Zuma, saying he hadn't committed a crime.
But Barlow insisted and two case dockets were opened. She said Sonjica should be charged as she had not done anything to stop the pollution and Zuma should be charged as he was responsible for ministers.
Criminal charges about water pollution are not new, but Barlow is taking the fight to a new level by filing complaints against the president.
Communities, civil society and ratepayers' associations are frustrated by a pollution problem they say is increasing while water, the country's most precious resource, is in a critical state.
"If we carry on like this in five years we will have no drinkable water left."
DA councillor Eddie Barlow filed charges last year against municipal manager Philemon Mapulane and technical services manager Mondi Juta over water pollution in the Madibeng municipality.
Juta was later suspended over the collapse of sewerage plants.
Eddie Barlow said the Crocodile River was being polluted "at a devastating rate". Also, none of the sewerage plants in Madibeng was functioning properly and between 10 and 12 million litres of raw sewage were flowing into the river at Brits.
"It's unacceptable."
In May, TauSA filed charges against Sonjica and the Minister of Agriculture Tina Joemat-Pettersson and Mining Minister Susan Shabangu in Brooklyn, Pretoria. It said mines used 7 percent of the country's water and were responsible for 75 percent of water pollution.
The DA's spokesman on water and environmental affairs, Gareth Morgan, said all indicators pointed to a decline in water courses and charges for water pollution were being laid more often.
"Departments are even charging each other," he said.
"The Department of Water Affairs has laid charges against Madibeng municipality."
Morgan said sewerage infrastructure was in an appalling state.
"About 30 percent of sewerage plants could fail any day. There is a lack of maintenance, which means untreated sewage flows into water courses."
The pollution of Hartbeespoort Dam was a good example of the state of water systems because it was the collecting point of all sources of pollution, Morgan said.
Acid mine drainage is also a threat. Mariette Liefferink, of the Federation for a Sustainable Environment, said acid mine drainage was flowing into the Tweelopies Spruit, which flowed into the Crocodile River and Hartbeespoort Dam.
"It's toxic and radioactive sludge. The situation is extremely serious."
This article was originally published on page 2 of The Pretoria News on August 10, 2010
The Star
Ciomments by Sonny
Zuma has friends in the NPA and Judiciary - will the charges ever stick -this time
'round?
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