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CRAWLING cockroaches and bedbugs eating you alive, while dripping water showers you in your bed. Add some faulty
wiring and you could be in for the shock of your life.
No, this is not an extreme version of Big Brother meets Fear Factor, but the true life precarious conditions in
which residents of the PAT building at the junction of Main Street and Pastorie Avenue in Paarl have to live.
The building houses about 40 people in ten apartments and 19 single rooms sharing communal bathrooms which are in
a dilapidated state.
One of the two baths on the second floor is out of order and peeling paint appears to be crawling off the walls at
every corner.
Residents of this apartment block, property of Ashraf Ahmed of Salt River, have had enough. Leading their charge
for better living conditions is retired civil servant Magda Marais.
"There has never been cockroaches on this floor before," says Marais, who lives on the second floor and has been a
resident in the building for 13 years.
After repeated requests for Ahmed to take control of the pest situation and warnings by health inspectors, two men
did appear on the Thursday after Christmas to spray the building.
"They however never came back for a follow-up spraying. The bug problem is still just as bad. I blow my budget
weekly, buying pesticide to spray my own place to keep the bugs out," says Marais.
"Since they've sprayed the place, the roaches have taken over, crawling out of the cracks in the walls. Bedbugs are
also a big problem."
But it's not only the bugs that bother her.
Residents are plagued by streams of water cascading down the bedroom walls every time it rains, following apparently
unsuccessful roof repairs by the previous owner.
"In the past there was some dampness in the walls with visible mildew, but last year the situation deteriorated,"
says Marais as she shows you the watermarks on her walls.
"We have tried to sand down the worst of it, but as soon as it rains we have to dry and clean it up all over again."
In the same breath she tells of another resident, who slipped and fell on the wet steps of the fire escape - a
condition which allegedly came about due to the leaking roof.
The whole interior of the building is in dire need of paint and the wrecked post boxes and broken gutters also need
repairing.
The most threatening of the problems, however, is the rotten wiring.
"According to one of the municipal inspectors, the geyser and stove connections of two of the apartments are
connected and the building as a whole isn't earthed. They say all the wiring is rotten and needs to be redone," says Marais.
Ahmed bought the building for R1,8 million at an auction in October 2003.
"I was at the auction myself, and there they said that the building needs work," says Marais. "But he has done
nothing since."
Ahmed, owner of Zhauns material shops, says the complaints are exaggerated.
"When we bought the building we had no idea there were leaks, but when winter arrived, we saw the problems. The leaks
will be seen to before winter.
"The whole interior of the building certainly does not need to be painted - this is a gross exaggeration.
"When we bought the building the electrical supply should have been in working order - why blame me? The previous
owner, Louis Gildenhuys, was the person who neglected the building."
He blames Marais's complaints on racism: "Because mine is a BEE group, the problems are blown out of proportion. It's
racism. Our building is in better condition than many similar residential buildings in Paarl."
A day after Ahmed was asked to comment on Marais's complaints, she received a letter asking her to vacate the
building.
Marais admits she is in arrears due to the condition of the building. Her debt includes a monthly bill of R50 for
water.
"I don't even have my own bathroom, and the R50 is not stated in any contract.
"I am not the only one who is in arrears - why am I the only one told to move out suddenly?" asks Marais, a
pensioner.
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