When the Grocott’s Mail team reached Joza and Extension 10, it was colder, wetter and even muddier than any of the farm roads we’d just come off. Asikelelwe Pezisa, Zethu Hlubi and Sue Maclennan report.

Around 3pm, Samuel Ntlebi Primary School in Joza was abuzz with voters and IEC staff said it had been like that all day.

“We didn’t even get a 10-minute break,” one official said. Of a possible 1809 votes, 565 had been cast.

The Samuel Ntlebi voting station was very busy throughout the day. Photos: Sue Maclennan
Even the neighbourhood dogs looked for shelter at the Samuel Ntlebi voting station.
Party representatives abandoned their tables opposite the Samuel Ntlebi voting station to seek shelter from the rain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Outside, on the pavement opposite the school’s entrance, tables draped with party paraphernalia stood abandoned and in soggy disarray, their operators huddled in the shelters of any doorway they could find as the rain pelted down.

A tip-off took us to the green-and-blue striped tent behind the flats in Extension 10 and it was a challenge to decide which line of muddiness was the road. Named in the IEC’s list of voting stations as the Assumption Clinic Tent, it was (very) roughly in the vicinity of Konongendi. With rain pelting down and the temperature now down to 12C, clutches of voters huddled inside.

A tent was used in Extension 10 instead of the Assumption Clinic. Photo: Sue Maclennan

Grocott’s Mail had been told that the voting set-up there was inadequate and that voters were being transported by their parties to alternative voting stations. But while the tent crowded with cold people, it was calm and orderly and we didn’t observe anything unusual there. The first votes counted in #Makana were that station, where there was a voter turnout of 60.12%.

 

Across Joza Street and beyond an expanse of litter-covered land, the Umzi Wasetiyopiya Catholic Church was also packed with people in coats, scarves and beanies. Of a possible voter total for that station of around 1 800, 1604 had voted by 4pm.

Voters wait their turn at the Ethiopian Church.

There, Xolo Dlamini was very clear about why he was there.

“It is up to me to choose who I want, so that’s why I’m here,” he told us. “I want to choose exactly the party that I want to govern our country.

“I want to see free education, I want to see our government free of corruption, I want to see more people getting opportunities to get into business.

“‘Cause I believe at the moment people are educated to be employees, not to be employers. So, I need our education system to change. Young people should be taught to become their own bosses: not to be employees, but rather to be employers.”

Xolo Dlamini speaks to Rhodes Journalism students Asikelelwe Pezisa and Zethu Hlubi.

LISTEN:

https://www.grocotts.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Zethu-Hlubi_Xolo-Dlamini_Elections_Vox-Pops-mp3.mp3?_=1

LOOK:

 

https://www.grocotts.co.za/news/saelections-2019-in-makana/

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