Ipelegeng workers starve
While the government struggles to pay Ipelegeng workers in several districts across the country, those who relied on the monthly stipends for daily survival are now facing severe hardship.
Though modest, the P600 monthly earnings allowed labourers to cover essential costs such as insurance premiums, stokvel contributions, and even medications that are critical in a country where hospitals and clinics frequently face shortages of life-saving drugs.
For months now, the programme appears to have been suspended, leaving beneficiaries uncertain if it will ever resume.
Many workers are in a desperate limbo, unsure how to manage their basic needs without the income they have depended on for years.
The government, through the Ministry of Local Government and Traditional Affairs, assured the nation last week that it has no intentions of permanently halting the programme, citing its role in providing socio-economic relief to vulnerable citizens.
However, officials admit that they owe thousands of beneficiaries allowances, with delays attributed to severe financial constraints currently facing the country.
In Kgatleng, one of the first districts to publicly feel the effects of the payment freeze, the impact has been particularly stark.
Council Chairman Thabo Komane has told constituents bluntly that the council has no money to hire or pay workers, leaving many in the lurch.
Stella Nthwesane, an Ipelegeng worker in Kgatleng who spoke on behalf of others, shared with a shaky voice the toll the delay has taken on her and her colleagues.
“We are hungry, there is nothing to eat,” she lamented.
Stella explained that even the small payments they used to receive were crucial for honouring furniture and insurance payments.
She fears that missing payments could result in them being cut off from their insurance entirely, forcing them to start over if, by chance, the programme resumes.
“This is not just about money; this is about survival. If things do not return to normal, some of us may not even have a coffin when the time comes,” she said, her words underscoring the dire reality many face.
The frustration is compounded by promises political partiers make.
When the Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC) assumed power in November 2024 under President Duma Gideon Boko, they pledged tangible improvements to citizens’ lives, including an increase in Ipelegeng payments from P600 to P2,500.
For many, the stark contrast between promises and reality is bitter; instead of an increase, workers are now receiving nothing at all.
The gap between political assurances and lived realities has left a sense of betrayal among the very people the programme was designed to support.
As months drag on with no clear resolution, workers like Nthwesane and countless others across the country face an uncertain future.
The Ipelegeng programme, once a lifeline, has become a symbol of unfulfilled promises and a reminder of the fragile safety net on which vulnerable citizens rely.