Key points 

  • Criminal syndicates and corruption are sabotaging water infrastructure, turning a basic human right into a profit-making scheme. 
  • Government mismanagement and weak oversight have worsened access, leaving many communities dry and vulnerable. 
  • Urgent reforms and civic accountability are vital to restore water systems and public trust. 

In a country where access to water is a constitutional right, South Africans are increasingly finding themselves at the mercy of dry taps, leaking and bursting pipes, and failing infrastructure, creating localised water crises.  

Behind the national water crisis lies a story of deliberate sabotage, entrenched corruption, and systemic neglect. The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), in its recent policy brief, paints a grim picture of how “water mafias,” vandalism, and institutional failures have combined to erode both the country’s water systems and public trust. 

While South Africa is a water-scarce country by geography, its current crisis is not only environmental. Today’s water shortages are largely human-made. Profits are being extracted from the deliberate sabotage of water infrastructure, vandalism and theft, leaving residents high and dry, while money overflows in the pockets of profiteers. 

Water access reality 

According to the latest statistics, only 87% of households have access to an improved water source, down from 89.1% in 2021. For many communities, even this access is unreliable or entirely absent for months, due to theft, non-functioning infrastructure, and the non-delivery of water tanks.  

This reflects the dire state of water access and supply across numerous provinces, especially in underserved rural areas. In provinces like Mpumalanga and the Northern Cape, over half of households have reported water outages or interruptions lasting longer than two days. Some neighbourhoods within the City of Johannesburg endure weeks without water, with poor communication regarding the whereabouts of stationary or roaming water tankers. For a nation with the infrastructure and resources to do better, this regression is alarming. 

Further compounding the issue is non-revenue water (NRW)—treated water lost due to leaks, illegal connections, and poor billing practices. Estimates suggest that 40–50%, or even more, of all water is lost before reaching consumers. This staggering inefficiency undermines resilience in a country already battling droughts, climate unpredictability, and high water scarcity. 

Sabotage and the rise of the ‘water mafia’ 

The SAHRC’s report highlights a troubling trend also flagged at the Presidential Water and Sanitation Indaba: the deliberate destruction and manipulation of water infrastructure by criminal syndicates for disruption and profit. Known informally as “water mafias,” these groups exploit infrastructure failures for personal gain. In parts of Gauteng Province, syndicates are reportedly closing valves, damaging pipelines and pump stations—only to resell water through tankers at inflated prices. Residents are forced to pay these informal suppliers while municipal systems remain crippled by the very sabotage that created the demand. 

The implications are deeply unjust. Vulnerable, poor, and rural communities bear the brunt of these disruptions, often going days or weeks without safe, potable water. As access disappears, health risks rise, hygiene declines, and public frustration mounts. 

Health and economic fallout 

The impact of this crisis is not abstract; it can be deadly. In 2023, a cholera outbreak in Hammanskraal led to at least 20 deaths, traced to contaminated and poorly treated water. In a nation where water infrastructure is failing and oversight is scarce, the chances of such outbreaks are high and may grow if necessary, oversight mechanisms aren’t enforced. 

Economically, the water crisis undermines productivity, business continuity, and investor confidence. When water is scarce or unreliable, industry slows, agriculture suffers, and job security weakens. For a developing economy already facing electricity instability, the water crisis adds yet another layer of risk. 

Systemic failures and broken accountability 

The SAHRC report rightly identifies continuous systemic dysfunction. There are 105 water service authorities legally responsible for delivering water and sanitation services, with a mandate to ensure timely, affordable, and sustainable access. Yet, procurement processes in many municipalities remain vulnerable to manipulation and political interference. Skilled professionals are often absent from critical posts due to cadre deployment or underfunding. Maintenance budgets are cut or diverted, and there is little accountability for project failures. 

Law enforcement has failed to treat infrastructure-related crime with the seriousness it deserves. Sabotage of water systems should be considered an attack on public safety and human rights, yet prosecutions remain rare. 

A path forward: Urgent and possible 

Though the picture is bleak, it is not irreversible. The SAHRC outlines several important recommendations that demand swift implementation to protect the entire water value chain: 

  1. Secure critical infrastructure using real-time technology and community-based surveillance programs. 
  1. Ring-fence revenue collected for water services—ensuring that funds are reinvested into system upgrades and maintenance, not lost to corrupt contracts. This is currently being implemented through cooperation between the Department of Water and Sanitation, National Treasury, and COGTA. 
  1. Empower municipalities with skilled personnel, regular audits, and consequence management for non-performance. 
  1. Protect whistleblowers who expose sabotage and fraud. Major cases should be investigated by the Special Investigating Unit and prosecuted by the National Prosecuting Authority. 
  1. Strengthen inter-agency coordination to treat sabotage as organised crime—not just petty vandalism. 

As always, civil society must play a vital role. Continued public pressure, quality investigative journalism, and legal activism are essential to hold officials and contractors accountable, especially regarding multi-million rand tenders for water tankers in major urban areas such as the City of Johannesburg. Communities must be engaged not just as recipients of services, but as co-stewards of public infrastructure, though this will be difficult amid current distrust born of prolonged periods without water and little to no warning. 

Restoring trust, drop by drop 

South Africa’s water crisis is a mirror reflecting broader governance failures; broken pipes as symbols of broken promises. Infrastructure can be rebuilt and maintained. Legislation can be amended. But trust takes far longer to repair, if ever. 

If water is life, then safeguarding our water systems is safeguarding our future. What is needed now is more than policy or promises, it’s action, transparency, and accountability. Without it, the taps may continue to run dry, not only of water, but of public faith in the institutions meant to serve them. 

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Water management expert and associate professor at the University of South Africa (Unisa).

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