The women said the Department had promised to pay all beneficiaries of maintenance payments through a new national system.
In many cases, money is deducted from the father’s income by his employer as ordered by the court, and paid to the court, which then pays the mother of the child.Sometimes maintenance payments are paid directly by the father to the court, which then pays the mother.
An official of the court came out to address the protesters. She told the women: “Our bank was totally closed after the 15th of March, and now payments will be done from the national office only.”
Nosipho Vazi, one of the protesters, shouted, “I have been sent from pillar to post and now it’s four months. I started enquiring about my child maintenance payment in the KwaNobuhle Magistrate’s Court in March, and I was told to wait as there was a new system of payment being introduced.”
“In April, I was told by the same court that the computers were offline, and I kept going there for a few weeks only to be told they were offline.”Now when I came to the Uitenhage Magistrate’s Court, I was told R3,000 that was deducted from the payslip of my child’s father has been paid out to someone they don’t know. I am owed by this court R9,000 because for three months I never got a cent.”
The official asked the protesters to write down their names in a register. The women refused.
“How many times must we keep writing our names in your papers? To hell with that,” said one woman.
The official said the new payment system was the problem and asked for patience.
National spokesperson for the Department of Justice and Correctional Service Chrispin Phiri said, “We note that the concerns around maintenance systems are ongoing and we will try our best to address those problems expeditiously. We are working on the system, assessing each and every complainant put to our system about the system.”