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Community taking action to clean their streets
Instead, she saw the children's play areas brimming with rubbish, forcing them on to the streets, which were flowing with dirty water due to no drainage system. This prompted her to initiate a clean-up campaign. "Children should be able to grow up in a clean and safe environment," says Kambule.
"The community leaders expressed their unhappiness with the state of their neighbourhood. The refuse had not been collected for two months, and while the refuse collection recommenced after a complaint was laid with the municipality, simply collecting rubbish would not be enough to transform this area into a cleaner environment. What was needed was for the members of the community to take responsibility for their surroundings," explains Kambule.
Educating residents
Kambule started the clean-up campaign by inviting the Departments of Waste Management and Water and Sanitation to speak to the community leaders on solutions and means of combating their waste problem. These community leaders are now going door-to-door to educate residents on how to best dispose of their waste. They are being supplied with refuse bags and asked to dig holes to throw their dirty water into. They are also being taught about recycling and requested to take these goods to an informal recycling business that is running in Itireleng.
Says Kambule, "We are not just teaching the community how to dispose of their waste, but also trying to make them understand that it is each individual's responsibility to keep their environment safe and ensure their children are able to play in a safe area."
Although Kambule reports that some residents are not interested in changing their ways, others are responding positively and are beginning to take ownership of keeping their space clean. "We have only recently started going door-to-door, but hope that once we have reached all the residents of the community, the state of Itireleng will improve."
Next phase
The next phase of the campaign includes clearing an area that has become a dumping ground and turning it into a park. Twenty one community members' names have already been put forward to the municipality to be employed for the construction of the park.
"The children of Itireleng have the right to a childhood and the clean-up campaign with provide them with an opportunity to play in a clean and safe environment," concludes Kambule.
Vodacom Change the World (CtW), is a programme that takes corporate philanthropy in a new direction. CtW, first launched in South Africa in October 2010, is part of the global World of Difference (WOD) initiative, which has successfully launched in 20 Vodafone countries. This initiative enables volunteers to work for the charity/non-profit organisation (NPO) of their choice for a specified period, at no cost to the volunteer and host organisation.
Source: South Africa: The Good News
South Africa: The Good News is a news website that highlights the positive developments in South Africa. It is an independent organisation, apolitical and with no agenda other than to source and publish good news about our country.
The organisation likes to stimulate dialogue and debate and also to offer a fresh perspective. It is well aware of the challenges that South Africa faces and the extent of these challenges. The organisation addresses these challenges full on, but chooses to concentrate on the solution, rather than the problem.
Its goal is to address the reality/perception gap that bad news is predominant in South Africa as well as to ‘sell’ South Africa as a country of positive development, excitement, opportunity, interest and as a potential travel and investment destination.
Go to: http://www.sagoodnews.co.za