Hon Speaker, the police that were shot last week were shot because there is darkness, there are no lights in Samora Machel. If you go to Bishopscourt, if you go to Hout Bay, no one will be shot there because it is forever daylight. The cameras are all working. If you go to side C in Khayelitsha, the police will be shot under the camera but you will never find that information because the camera in Khayelitsha has not been working for eight years. [Interjections.] So don't come here and talk as if we don't know this Cape Town, accompany us. We are making the call to the provincial government; work with us to deal with the crime situation here. Make life better.
Make sure that the people of the Western Cape that are in Khayelitsha, Samora Machel and in Siqalo, understand that Cape Town is also for them just like those that are in Bishopscourt. [Applause.] But for now, maybe some years back somebody called them foreigners here, maybe that is how they are kept in the Western Cape. So, don't come here and tell us about where you govern - where you govern. Let's go and see how those people ... this is the only province where people carry toilets like their
bags, potty potty. It is the only place and nowhere else. Anybody that respects any human being was not going to give them a toilet as my bag to move around with it. [Interjections.] [Applause.]
So, the DA must really understand that the people of Khayelitsha deserve the same things that the people in Bishopscourt deserve and that will help. [Applause.] Don't tell us about how to rule better. You are only partially ruling better in Western Cape but I want to invite you. [Interjections.] Let's go to Siqalo. Maybe, you can ask those that know where Siqalo is because most of you don't know where it is. You absolutely don't know where Siqalo is. [Applause.] [Interjections.] I will take you for a tour and we will go to Siqalo. Thank you very much, hon Speaker. [Applause.]