Chairperson, to save time, let me say that hon Shiceka addressed this House two days ago and he informed us of what he found on the ground when he visited Site C in Khayelitsha, in particular. He found about 5 000 people without proper sanitation. [Interjections.] Three people share a toilet. That's exactly why we must do away with all these boundaries that were created, unnecessarily, just to give power to some people.
The selective delivery of services to and the neglect of townships by the City of Cape Town is an issue that requires all of us to look at it with utmost urgency and vigilance. We want to reassure the hon Helen Zille and her party that the ANC has moved beyond the divisions of the past. We will not sit and watch as her party implements policies that are intended to instigate elements of our divided past and reverse the progress that our nation has made since 1994.
I live in Gugulethu, and even when you were mayor, you cut the water supply. [Interjections.] It is still happening; people in our townships are still holding pink letters, letters of demand. [Interjections.]
Bayagrogriswa ngamanye amagama. [In other words, they are being intimidated.]
It is true that, as we speak, people's water supply is still being cut. It is true that that programme started in 2006, when the hon premier was the Mayor of the City of Cape Town. It is also true that the hon Premier of the Western Cape is still sowing division. She has really planted racism in our province. [Interjections.]
As people living in the Western Cape, we would have loved ...