eMakhabeleni
A bridge has been built across the Dimane River in eMakhabeleni, KwaZulu-Natal. For years villagers were cut off from schools and Kranskop town when the river was flowing. Photo: Nokulunga Majola

After pleading with government for years, the Welisizwe Bridge Programme has finally delivered four bridges in eMakhabeleni

 

eMakhabeleni, South Africa (13 March, 2024)—Villagers in eMakhabeleni, outside Kranskop in Mvoti, KwaZulu-Natal, no longer have to worry about getting to school and work in town by wading through overflowing rivers during the rainy season.

On Tuesday, Public Works and Infrastructure Minister Sihle Zikalala officially handed over four bridges in the area. The bridges are part of government’s Welisizwe Bridges Programme, a collaboration between national public works, the National Defence Force (SANDF), and provincial transport departments. Their construction inSkhova, Nophethu, Mandlalathi and in Dimane (which was finished a year ago) provided work for over 300 people.

One of the workers, Nonhlanhla Mtshali, said, “We learnt a lot. They were patient with us and I am happy to have been part of a project that also helped my community.”

In April 2022, GroundUp wrote about how the villagers were cut off from Kranskop town when the Dimane River was flowing, and children could not get to school.

Siphiwe Ngidi said, “For years, families had to carry coffins across the river because vehicles couldn’t cross. I am happy that is all behind us.”

A primary school governing body member, Sakhile Masikane, said, “Children were missing school when the river was full and some even missed their exams.”

He said there was still more to be done, such as fixing the road.

Ward 6 Councillor Sanele Makhaye (IFP) said, “The bridge is just the beginning; there is more that needs to be done.”

Last year, Minsiter Zikalala said the Welisizwe Bridges Programme will spend R1.1-billion annually, targeting rural provinces – the Eastern Cape (where the project was piloted), KwaZulu-Natal, Free State, Mpumalanga, Limpopo and the North West.

Each bridge construction site has seven defence force members to oversee the project, five artisans, and at least 40 expanded public works programme workers.

The Welisizwe programme is expected to deliver 100 bridges.

The Dimane River during heavy rains before the bridge was built. Archive Photo: Nokulunga Majola

Sources: GroundUp
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Ashleigh Nefdt is a writer for Good Things Guy.

Ashleigh's favourite stories have always seen the hidden hero (without the cape) come to the rescue. As a journalist, her labour of love is finding those everyday heroes and spotlighting their spark - especially those empowering women, social upliftment movers, sustainability shakers and creatives with hearts of gold. When she's not working on a story, she's dedicated to her canvas or appreciating Mother Nature.

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