Eastern Cape government policy often echoes national directives promising better access to water and sanitation through infrastructure refurbishment and diversification of water sources. Yet this alignment exists more in official strategy documents than in the daily lives of rural communities who still lack reliable access to safe water. Across the province, millions of rands have been spent on projects that stall, incur cost overruns, or fail to deliver the services they were meant to provide. In some instances, municipalities have been placed under investigation for irregular expenditure and maladministration related to water infrastructure grants, with the Special Investigating Unit probing multiple key projects in the Alfred Nzo District that were not properly administered under the relevant financial and supply chain regulations. These probes, which cover planning, implementation, and payments over nearly a decade, underscore how systemic governance issues have eroded the integrity of public spending and left vital needs unfulfilled.
This pattern of stalled projects and escalating costs has been recognised at national levels too. Water and Sanitation Minister Pemmy Majodina has acknowledged that numerous projects remain incomplete despite funds already disbursed, and that some treatment plants require far more than their original budgets due to delays and poor execution. Auditors have found irregularities in a significant proportion of municipal contracts, even as the department seeks to reclaim and redirect funds to finish essential systems. The Auditor‑General has also reported that water infrastructure projects valued in the billions are delayed, with a large share of pipelines and dam repair works yet to be completed.
This failure of implementation translates directly into hardship for ordinary people. Nearly one in five households in the Eastern Cape reportedly have no access to drinking water, with many rural residents forced to rely on contaminated rivers and wells when municipal supplies cut out. Community members in Alfred Nzo have shared accounts of drawing water from sources they share with animals, illustrating the distressing reality faced when infrastructure investments fall short of delivery. Prolonged shortages have forced families and local groups to resort to court action or protests in an effort to compel authorities to uphold their constitutional right to water.
These conditions have profound consequences for education. Reliable water and sanitation are foundational to basic school functioning, yet many rural learners attend schools without dependable water on site. In South Africa more broadly, figures indicate that a quarter of schools lack a reliable water supply, forcing learners and teachers to improvise and sometimes bring their own drinking water just to participate in a normal school day. Without safe water and adequate sanitation, school environments become unhygienic, attendance drops (especially among girls during menstruation) and the very promise of education as a pathway out of poverty is undermined.
The impacts on health are equally stark. Inconsistent or unsafe water supply increases the risk of waterborne diseases such as cholera and dysentery, which in turn place additional strain on local clinics and health services already operating with limited resources. Health workers in rural regions report that frequent interruptions in water access disrupt basic hygiene practices and impede essential care, making communities more vulnerable to preventable illnesses and compounding broader public health challenges. Beyond disease, the time and effort required to fetch water from distant or unsafe sources reduce opportunities for income‑earning activities and community development.
What emerges is not a technical glitch but a deep social injustice: fundamental human needs and rights are compromised in the very places where people are most vulnerable. For those in rural Eastern Cape, the gap between policy aspiration and lived reality has left education, health, and dignity on the margins. It also calls into question whether governments at local and national levels have exercised the transparency and accountability necessary to ensure that public funds achieve public good.
If the Eastern Cape government is serious about reversing this injustice, then alignment with national policy must be accompanied by measurable outcomes. This requires transparent accounting for water and sanitation budgets, independent oversight of project implementation, and clear consequences for wasteful or irregular expenditure. It also means empowering communities with real participation in monitoring and reporting on service delivery so that repairs and maintenance are responsive to those who rely on them daily. Crucially, policymakers must confront not only the technical challenges of ageing infrastructure and water scarcity but the deeper inequities that allow rural communities to fall behind while billions are spent with limited effect.
Water is not merely a commodity; it is a basic human right essential to health, education, and human dignity. The persistence of inequality in access to safe water and adequate sanitation in the Eastern Cape is not just a policy failure, it is a social injustice that the province and the nation cannot afford to ignore.
*The opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of the newspaper.*
DAILY NEWS
Awam Mavimbela
iol.co.za
