The local municipality supports the motion of a class action law suit against the owners of the failed dams, the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development.
The community of Riverlands, a small village between Atlantis and Malmesbury in the Western Cape, is still reeling from the loss of their homes, livelihoods and damaged infrastructure due to a flood resulting from the rupture of three dams on the Dassenberg Farm during heavy rains last month.
On Thursday last week, in a show of the grand alliance between the African National Congress and the Democratic Alliance, the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) together with the MEC for local government and the mayor of Swartland Municipality, presented a preliminary report to the media and members of the community.
The dams, according to the report, had no sufficient spillways which caused them to break as it was raining heavily. The report puts the blame at the door of the current owner, the national Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development (DALRRD), and the previous owners.
Presented by DWS Minister Pemmy Majodina, the report states that the dams were built without permits and are therefore unlicenced. Three of the four dams were built in the 1960s by the then owner of Dassenberg Farm. The fourth dam, was built by Agrico Machinery when the farm was sold to them in 2000. The report states that Agrico Machinery constructed the dam without a licence.
The then Department of Rural Development and Land Reform bought the farm in 2019 and leased to a co-operative without doing due diligence of checking that the dams were licenced. The Mazibuyinkomo Primary Agricultural Co-operative have a 30-year lease agreement with the merged departments of agriculture and land reform, DALRRD.
According to the report, the floods affected hundreds of people, leaving some homeless, and causing severe damage to infrastructure, including roads, railway lines, and Eskom’s transmission network. Water infrastructure was damaged and the community now relies on water trucks. The minister announced that the DWS would, together with the Swartland Municipality, determine the extent of the damage caused by the failure of the dams.
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