-
Volkswagen posts 1-billion-euro loss on tariffs, Porsche woes
-
'Fight fire with fire': California mulls skewing electoral map
-
Fentanyl, beans and Ukraine: Trump hails 'success' in talks with Xi
-
'Nowhere to sleep': Melissa upends life for Jamaicans
-
Irish octogenarian enjoys new lease on life making harps
-
Tanzania blackout after election chaos, deaths feared
-
G7 meets on countering China's critical mineral dominance
-
Trump hails tariff, rare earth deal with Xi
-
Court rules against K-pop group NewJeans in label dispute
-
India's Iyer says 'getting better by the day' after lacerated spleen
-
Yesavage fairytale carries Blue Jays to World Series brink
-
Bank of Japan keeps interest rates unchanged
-
Impoverished Filipinos forge a life among the tombstones
-
Jokic posts fourth straight triple-double as Nuggets rout Pelicans
-
UN calls for end to Sudan siege after mass hospital killings
-
Teenage Australian cricketer dies after being hit by ball
-
As Russia advances on Kupiansk, Ukrainians fear second occupation
-
Trade truce in balance as Trump meets 'tough negotiator' Xi
-
China to send youngest astronaut, mice on space mission this week
-
Yesavage gem carries Blue Jays to brink of World Series as Dodgers downed
-
With inflation under control, ECB to hold rates steady again
-
Asia stocks muted with all eyes on Trump-Xi meeting
-
Personal tipping points: Four people share their climate journeys
-
Moto3 rider Dettwiler 'no longer critical' after crash: family
-
US economy in the dark as government shutdown cuts off crucial data
-
Trump orders nuclear testing resumption ahead of Xi talks
-
'Utter madness': NZ farmers agree dairy sale to French group
-
Samsung posts 32% profit rise on-year in third quarter
-
30 years after cliffhanger vote, Quebec separatists voice hope for independence
-
Taxes, labor laws, pensions: what Milei wants to do next
-
South Sudan's blind football team dreams of Paralympic glory
-
US says 4 killed in new strike on alleged Pacific drug boat
-
What we do and don't know about Rio's deadly police raid
-
'They slit my son's throat' says mother of teen killed in Rio police raid
-
Arteta hails 'special' Dowman after 15-year-old makes historic Arsenal start
-
Google parent Alphabet posts first $100 bn quarter as AI fuels growth
-
Underwater 'human habitat' aims to allow researchers to make weeklong dives
-
Maresca slams Delap for 'stupid' red card in Chelsea win at Wolves
-
'Non-interventionist' Trump flexes muscles in Latin America
-
Slot defends League Cup selection despite not meeting 'Liverpool standards'
-
'Poor' PSG retain Ligue 1 lead despite stalemate and Doue injury
-
Liverpool crisis mounts after League Cup exit against Palace
-
Kane scores twice as Bayern set European wins record
-
Radio Free Asia suspends operations after Trump cuts and shutdown
-
Meta shares sink as $16 bn US tax charge tanks profit
-
Dollar rises after Fed chair says December rate cut not a given
-
Google parent Alphabet posts first $100 bn quarter as AI drives growth
-
Rob Jetten: ex-athlete setting the pace in Dutch politics
-
Juve bounce back after Tudor sacking as Roma keep pace with leaders Napoli
-
Favorite Sovereignty scratched from Breeders' Cup Classic after fever
Sparkling pools, empty taps: Cape Town's stark water divide
On Cape Town's beaches, swimmers shower off sand from their feet. Irrigation pipes water the region's famed vineyards. And Shadrack Mogress fumes as he fills a barrel with water so he can flush his toilet.
It's been four years since South Africa's tourist capital nearly ran dry, during a drought that left the city limping towards a "Day Zero" when all the pipes would empty.
Now water flows liberally -- but not for everyone.
South Africa is the most unequal country in the world, with race playing a determining factor, a World Bank report said last week.
The taps at Mogress's house in the township of Khayelitsha run only intermittently, and rarely with full pressure.
So at 56 years old, he wakes up early to fill up a barrel while the water is running, so that his household of six can drink and wash all day.
“We also need to take from that water to use the toilet, which is an insult at the end of the day," Mogress said.
“We have toilets here. We have showers here. We cannot use those," he said. "Our children go to school in the morning at about 6:00 a.m. Sometimes there's no water at that time.”
Mogress said he contacted city officials several times about the issues but has not heard back.
“We're sitting within the middle of a pandemic here, and we do not even have water to wash our hands,” he said.
City trucks that deliver water to the community are unreliable, Sandile Zatu, a 45-year-old resident said.
"We have no choice but to wake up in the morning and try to fill our bucket as much as possible," he added.
- Worse than ‘Day Zero’ -
During the drought, city-wide efforts to save water created a sense of shared purpose. Everyone avoided flushing toilets, gave up on watering plants, and let their cars sit dirty for months.
"At that time, we knew that we were sitting with a problem," Mogress said. "But it is actually worse, because we do have water and we know that."
Swimming pools in Cape Town's posh suburbs do have water, but the city estimates that about 31 neighbourhoods have no access to clean water.
That includes sprawling districts filled with shacks, but also working-class neighbourhoods.
Ironically, Covid brought better water supplies to some areas.
The state of disaster that empowered lockdown measures also allowed authorities to deliver more water to encourage better washing.
If the state of disaster is called off, the city will lose funding to deliver water, city water official Zahid Badroodien said.
- Future droughts -
Badroodien said the city was investing millions of rand in the aging water infrastructure, adding that a Day Zero was "inevitable".
But it is harder for the city to provide reliable water services in some areas due to "funding being tied up in existing projects to try and establish services in existing communities."
"At the same time, the safety of our officials becomes an issue in these areas, where I know for a fact that our tankers have been hijacked, our officials have been hijacked, they've been held up at gunpoint," he said.
Jo Barnes, a water expert at Stellenbosch University, said the city has shown poor planning for future droughts.
"To not plan for the next drought -- which may be around the corner -- sounds like managerial suicide to me," she said.
"We're getting more and more people, and we have the same volume of water. So, unless we do something magic, we're going to run into the same problem again."
T.Bondarenko--BTB