EZENZELENI, South Africa (Reuters) - Aaron Lephotho tries to ignore the taunts hurled at him by residents as he lumbers towards a tanker truck shouldering a bucket brimming with human waste.
This is part of Lephotho's daily routine, going door-to-door in this dusty township collecting dozens of buckets filled with excrement from households that, more than 10 years after the end of apartheid, do not have proper toilets.
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