The South African Human Rights Commission has initiated a formal inquiry into Gauteng's ongoing water crisis, citing potential systemic human rights violations. The probe will examine infrastructure failures, governance issues and the rise of a 'water tanker mafia'. Public submissions are invited until 30 April 2026.
Gauteng residents have faced prolonged water shortages, leading to intermittent or no tap water, reliance on boreholes, tankers and sometimes unsafe sources. The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) launched the inquiry following numerous complaints about shortages, infrastructure breakdowns and service disruptions.
The commission highlighted the crisis's disproportionate effect on poor communities, informal settlements, schools and healthcare facilities. "These challenges have had a disproportionate impact on poor and marginalised communities... undermining dignity, health, safety and access to basic services," SAHRC stated. It invoked Section 27(1)(b) of the Constitution, which guarantees the right to sufficient water.
The inquiry will assess root causes, human rights impacts, state responses and governance in water management. It will also investigate the 'water tanker mafia', described by SAHRC as informal networks profiting through corruption, vandalism and illegal charges amid municipal tanker use. "Prolonged and recurring water outages have created dependence on unregulated private water tankers, entrenching inequality, profiteering and commodification of a constitutional right," the commission noted.
Stakeholders can submit written reports on causes, impacts and solutions to SAHRC's Gauteng office in Johannesburg or via email until 30 April 2026. Hearings are scheduled for 19 to 21 May 2026.