The City of Cape Town has defended its use of the term "day zero", emphasising there still is a real possibility the metro’s water sources can dry up.Published on14 March 2018By Smile Staff ReporterFacebookTwitterWhatsApp Smile Staff ReporterLatestT&Cs for Miles Of Smiles CampaignAnalysis: Queen Elizabeth modernised the British monarchyIncrease in alcohol confiscations on Cape Town beaches[LISTEN] Being A Firefighter on The Frontline[LISTEN] Gemma’s Christmas Story of HopeLatest articlesWATCH: Tyla praised for her poised rendition of the National Anthem 12 June 2026 WIN with Ryan’s R50 000 Noise 12 June 2026 Continue to support Bafana Bafana at the FIFA World Cup 12 June 2026 SASSA Rolls Out National Training to Tackle Long Queues and Improve Service Delivery 12 June 2026 Previous articleProteas speedster Kagiso Rabada has appealed the ICC suspension that will see him miss the rest of the Australian series.Next articleThe City of Cape Town has defended its use of the term “day zero”, emphasising there still is a real possibility the metro’s water sources can dry up.WATCH: Tyla praised for her poised rendition of the National Anthem Smile Staff Reporter - 12 June 2026 Global pop superstar Tyla has earned praise from many South Africans for her rendition of the National Anthem ahead of Bafana Bafana's FIFA World...SASSA Rolls Out National Training to Tackle Long Queues and Improve Service Delivery Smile Staff Reporter - 12 June 2026 The South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) is intensifying its digital transformation efforts through the rollout of an enhanced Queue Management System aimed at...Plea deal sheds new light on murder linked to massive Still Bay cocaine haul Smile Staff Reporter - 12 June 2026 One of the accused in the R252 million Still Bay cocaine syndicate case has been sentenced to an effective 10 years behind bars after...