The Civil Engineering Contractor July 2018 | Page 3
COMMENT
(Not) Buttered on both sides
Kim Kemp - editor
[email protected]
Please join me in welcoming
Eamonn Ryan as the new
editor for The Civil Engineering
Contractor. Eamonn will be taking
on the role from the August issue.
I encourage you all to offer him
the same amazing support I have
enjoyed while in my role as editor
and wish him all the very best in
his new position.
W
hy is it that as soon as we
have any significant rain, our
roads literally fall to pieces as
sinkholes occur and, on a smaller scale (size-
wise, but on a larger scale in frequency),
potholes appear?
Taking a breather to watch a royal wedding
— between two people we all stand very
little chance of ever meeting (and for
me personally, no interest or desire) and
happening on an island far away — seems to
have served as a brief coping mechanism for
a country that is falling into an abyss — what
with endless delivery protests, burning toll
gates, national roads blocked, wage disputes,
trucks set on fire, illegal land grabs, and cash
in transit heists making daily headlines.
South Africans are bone-weary; we are
doing our best to just get to the next day, to
survive the endless onslaught of anger and
dissatisfaction. Our last reserves of energy
are being spent on conflict, mayhem, and
misinformation.
Grocery shopping recently brought this
latter observation into stark reality.
I was standing in front of a freezer, aghast
at the cost of the 500g brick of butter, and
muttered something about the ridiculous
cost under my breath, but loud enough for
the woman packing the frozen-item shelves
to hear. She commiserated immediately
with, “They are trying to kill us!” When I
queried as to whom “they” were, she said:
“The farmers. The farmers are trying to
kill us all with putting the prices up [and]
making everything so expensive. How can
we eat?”
To say I was surprised would be an
understatement.
What immediately sprung to mind was the
thousands of heads of cattle and dairy cows,
sheep, and pigs that had to be slaughtered in
the face of the terrible drought, as farmers
were unable to water or feed them.
I took pains to explain to my fellow
citizen the enormity of the drought’s effects.
With my fear that the language barrier
would prevent understanding, I resorted
to using flamboyant gestures and simple
descriptions; about how without water
nothing can live; how farmers were doing
their best to maintain a secure food supply
for a country with a burgeoning population;
how they had to kill so many of their
livestock; how the Department of Water
With the present mayhem in South Africa, we
are lucky to even have toast, let alone butter.
and Sanitation under Nomvula Mokonyane’s
‘leadership’ (used very lightly here) made
sure that infrastructure crumbled, that
water never got to those most in need,
and how she blamed the farmers for using
too much water, before swanning off to
the Department of Communications, where
she is currently serving as the Minister
of Communications, leaving a crippled,
‘broken’ water department in her wake.
I explained how this was causing the price
hikes, making everyday produce almost a
luxury owing to scarcity, and had nothing to
do with farmers trying to make a living and
an unrealistic profit.
I also threw in how listeriosis all but
decimated the ready-to-eat meats industry
that, according to the South African Meat
Processors Association (Sampa), has shed
about 2 000 jobs, while safety concerns
following the outbreak sent the prices and
demand for processed meat into a death
dive.
My new ‘bestie’ stood open-mouthed.
After a very intense pause, she almost
croaked: “I had no idea. We all think the
farmers are making things expensive; but
now you explain the drought, I understand
better.”
I hope Harry and Meghan enjoy a long and
happy marriage; glad there is something
reasonably pleasant being recorded in the
news — and don’t mind me while I eat my
toast without butter. nn
CEC July 2018 - 3