Discovering Hidden
Routes
We too easily see a
place through one perspective, but last week, because of our proximity to Century City in
Cape Town, we decided to walk a network of routes from Rugby to the Canal
Walk Shopping Centre, which had been the focus of our visits many times before.
After visiting the
shopping centre, on our walk back, we bought MyCiTi bus passes in
anticipation of using the public bus rapid transit service that we had been shy
of approaching in the preceding seven years of staying in Cape Town. However,
it was a panel of pictures showing how Century City had evolved since the 1990s
that caught our attention, though we were too tired to explore further.
Century City: The History of Century
City
A Second Chance
In our move to Pinelands, we
could have dismissed this opportunity again, but proximity once more compelled
us, not so much to walk it, but to get an Uber from Pinelands to the shopping
centre, explore the walkways of Century City, and then walk through Rugby and Milnerton to Woodbridge
Island.
It was during this
plan that we became flies on the wall of two encounters that left us saddened
by the malicious and malevolent intentions of others.
An Uncomfortable Ride
The Uber that took us
to the shopping centre was supposed to be a cool, comfortable ride, but for the
duration of the journey, the driver was in conversation on the phone. I did not
understand anything of what he was saying, but could hear bits about sums of
money being pushed about. You could immediately recognise he was involved in
some sort of deal.
His name was Trust,
but I would pray that no one, and especially Uber, should be trusting him. Had
we known what he was up to, we would not have trusted his picking us up either.
Whilst we were delivered to our destination safely, he was speaking Shona, one
of the major languages of Zimbabwe, which he probably assumed none of us
understood, but Brian did. With whoever he was chatting to, they were planning
a number of exploitative and manipulative schemes.
Schemes of
Exploitation
The first was to
register a number of cars with fake identities on the Uber platform, then
traffic people from rural areas in Zimbabwe to drive the cars with the aim of
paying them poverty or slavery wages as they drove endless hours to bring money
home for these chaps with pretensions to being crime bosses.
In the words of
Trust, and I paraphrase, "Just put a plate of food before them and they'll
be happy as Larry." They had every intention to mistreat, abuse, exploit,
and deal wickedly with whoever they were able to entice with the bright lights of
South Africa.
A Difficult Decision
I learnt all this
after our ride, to which I suggested Brian should have exited with a greeting
in Shona, just to let him know we were onto him. Obviously, there was no
possibility of us giving him five stars for his service, even if he did not
carry out his evil intentions, but we were left in a quandary as to whether to
report this encounter to Uber and how to frame what we understood had happened.
Another Overheard
Conversation
No sooner had we
begun our walk beyond the territory of the shopping centre into Century City
proper than there was another wheeler and dealer on the phone. I do not think
he was planning a new magic trick for his next performance, but he probably
works in one of the offices in Century City. He confided in his interlocutor on
the other end of the call about how he had to try to make four million South
African rand disappear.
I doubt we'll
recognise him, as we only heard him as he walked by us in the opposite
direction, and the disappearance of the money can only pertain to him having
view of, or access to, that money somewhere in an organisation and scheming to
thieve or embezzle it.
The Audacity of Evil
It did make us wonder
about both the audacity of calumny and the recklessness of incriminating
conversations that others think no one is hearing. These are thoughts that
should never emerge as words spoken when there is a conscience alive in us,
even if barely so. In both cases, we saw the clear sign that the love of money
is indeed the root of all evil.
It is quite likely
there are many instances of human trafficking, people exploitation, and
embezzlement as we visit places around Cape Town that we are totally oblivious
to. Yesterday, I gave a tip to a server in an establishment where the
personification of Cruella de Vil superintended with vicious verbiage; the
server's deep gratitude would suggest something I am unready to countenance.
The question is, who
will stop these evil people before they implement their rotten plans?