Floods, fragility, and forgotten lives: A call for climate justice in South Africa
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- by Gugu Nonjinge
The torrential rains, gale-force winds, and even snowfall that battered the Eastern Cape in June 2025 unleashed catastrophic flooding, displacing over 4,700 people and affecting more than 6,800 households. Those willing to confront the truth must admit that these floods are not merely environmental events but a profound human rights crisis. They expose the fury of nature and the consequences of systemic neglect in a country ill-prepared for climate shocks. Every collapsed home, every child lost, every family sleeping under plastic sheeting speaks to a government that continues to abandon its poorest citizens in the face of predictable and preventable harm.
Our world-renowned South African Constitution that enshrines not only civil and political rights, but also socio-economic rights, guarantees the rights to dignity, adequate housing, healthcare, and access to basic services. Yet, when rural families are left to rebuild with no compensation, when children sleep beneath torn plastic sheets, and when schools remain cut off for weeks, these rights are not only unmet, but they are also systematically ignored. Three decades into our democracy, we are still forced to ask: Whose rights truly count in a crisis? Whose suffering must become a public spectacle before the state chooses to respond?
The government's duty is to respond and prevent foreseeable harm. As climate change accelerates floods, droughts, and extreme weather, rural regions nationwide are growing more exposed, not protected. Failure to invest in resilience is not just poor planning; it violates constitutional obligations.
An infrastructure system built in the past
As climate shocks grow more frequent and severe, South Africa's deepening infrastructure crisis has become impossible to ignore. The country is not built to withstand today's high-intensity rainfall, storm surges, or urban flooding. Much of our infrastructure was designed for a climate that no longer exists. Drainage systems are overwhelmed and poorly maintained, while roads and bridges routinely collapse under pressure. Even Cape Town, often hailed as the country's "best-run" metro, is not immune. In recent weeks, heavy rains displaced over 3,000 residents, triggering widespread localized flooding and laying bare the illusion of resilience.
Emergency shelters: a gaping void in disaster response
South Africa's near-total absence of designated emergency shelters and contingency planning is compounding the crisis. Our flood response remains reactive, fragmented, and chronically underfunded. Municipalities are stretched thin, and most lack the capacity and planning frameworks for rapid, coordinated action.
In an era of escalating climate risk, the absence of designated emergency shelters is not merely a logistical oversight but a profound social injustice. Climate resilience must begin with the most basic guarantee: safe survival spaces. In KwaZulu-Natal, more than 150 flood victims temporarily housed at the Bayside Hotel in Durban were evicted, leaving them without refuge, dignity, or support. This was not disaster relief; it was abandonment.
Things must change
Unless our government confronts the systemic failures laid bare by repeated flood disasters, we will continue to cycle through devastation and delayed response. What's needed is not another relief plan, but a strategic transformation rooted in spatial justice, resilient infrastructure, social equity, and accountable governance. The solutions already exist. What's missing is the political will to act with the same urgency as the storms that keep returning.
Our municipalities must do more than react; they must prepare. That means embedding community-based disaster response, investing in livelihood recovery, and ensuring that no one is left behind simply because of where they live or what they earn. Building resilience starts with listening to the communities most at risk and acting before the next disaster hits.
The upcoming National Colloquium on South Africa's NDC 2035 offers a critical platform to ensure that the country's climate commitments are both ambitious and inclusive. Beyond technical discussions, it is a moment to advocate for stronger integration of justice, equity, and community-driven solutions into the NDC framework.
This article was originally published on Cape Times.

Gugu Nonjinge
Gugu Nonjinge is an external communications and advocacy professional with extensive experience in the social policy sector. She is currently a Senior Advocacy Officer at the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation. Her areas of expertise are gender justice and intersectional environmentalism





