Free State community shares one tap between 40 households


One tap is shared between more than 40 households in the community of Baipeing, which means ‘you have placed yourselves’. And what’s more is that the tap is situated in the dirty outskirts of the town where cows graze.
On a visit to the community, OurHealth spoke to a resident, Ntswaki Mokoena (38), who was doing her laundry at the tap while cows were grazing around her. “This is always the situation, at times the cows lick the tap. I fear that my kids are exposed to many germs and the water might not be a 100 percent healthy for human consumption,” Mokoena said
For more than 10 years the community has been complaining to the municipality about their living conditions but nothing has changed. “I have given up on assistance from the government, I thought by now we would all have taps in our yards. I am now used to sharing water with cows,” said another disgruntled resident, Dibuseng Matsima. “Children in our community suffer from diarrhoea more than any other disease, maybe the government wants us to die.”
A nurse at Mphohadi clinic, who asked to remain anonymous, confirmed that many children from Baipeing who come to the clinic are sick with diarrhoea.
According to a source (who also wants to remain anonymous) the local municipality is aware of the conditions at the Baipeing but have no plans to help them in the near future. – OurHealth/Health-e News Service
Selloane Molakeng is the OurHealth Citizen Journalist reporting from the Thabo Mofutsanyana health district in the Free State.
Author
-
Health-e News is South Africa's dedicated health news service and home to OurHealth citizen journalism. Follow us on Twitter @HealtheNews
View all posts
Republish this article

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Unless otherwise noted, you can republish our articles for free under a Creative Commons license. Here’s what you need to know:
-
You have to credit Health-e News. In the byline, we prefer “Author Name, Publication.” At the top of the text of your story, include a line that reads: “This story was originally published by Health-e News.” You must link the word “Health-e News” to the original URL of the story.
-
You must include all of the links from our story, including our newsletter sign up link.
-
If you use canonical metadata, please use the Health-e News URL. For more information about canonical metadata, click here.
-
You can’t edit our material, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style. (For example, “yesterday” can be changed to “last week”)
-
You have no rights to sell, license, syndicate, or otherwise represent yourself as the authorized owner of our material to any third parties. This means that you cannot actively publish or submit our work for syndication to third party platforms or apps like Apple News or Google News. Health-e News understands that publishers cannot fully control when certain third parties automatically summarise or crawl content from publishers’ own sites.
-
You can’t republish our material wholesale, or automatically; you need to select stories to be republished individually.
-
If you share republished stories on social media, we’d appreciate being tagged in your posts. You can find us on Twitter @HealthENews, Instagram @healthenews, and Facebook Health-e News Service.
You can grab HTML code for our stories easily. Click on the Creative Commons logo on our stories. You’ll find it with the other share buttons.
If you have any other questions, contact info@health-e.org.za.
Free State community shares one tap between 40 households
by Health-e News, Health-e News
March 7, 2013
MOST READ
Is a R1.78 billion start enough to rescue public healthcare?
Family in the dark a month after Limpopo psych ward shooting
U.S. funding cuts expose fragile global health system
Food or transport to medical care: the impossible choice many South Africans face
EDITOR'S PICKS
Related


Higher chicken and egg prices spell trouble for low-income families



Higher chicken and egg prices spell trouble for low-income families
