Cosatu calls for tolls protest
2012-11-15 07:30
(File, Sapa)
VideoE-tolls get the go-ahead
2012-10-29 08:47
Motorists on Gauteng's highways will pay 30c per km in e-tolls, Sanral has announced. Watch.WATCH
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Pretoria - The Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) has called for a day of civil disobedience on November 30 in protest against the e-tolling of Gauteng's highways, it said on Wednesday evening.
"We believe that government has taken its decision," Cosatu provincial chairperson Phutas Tseki told a public hearing in Pretoria.
"So, that's why we have taken a decision that we want to march on all the toll gates where we are going to have civil disobedience with our own small, medium and big cars on the day," he said.
"And we want to mobilise the society of Gauteng and society at large that they would support us in this action."
Tseki said that if protesters drove slowly at the gantries, other motorists would be forced to take alternative routes.
"In our view, they are not alternative roads. They are in very poor [condition] and we cannot drive on them."
Which alternative route?
He said this would make the government see the need to build new alternative roads if it wanted to tax the highways.
Earlier, Primedia Broadcasting head Yusuf Abramjee, speaking in his capacity as a Pretoria resident, said there were no adequate alternative routes from Pretoria to Johannesburg.
"Going from OR Tambo [International Airport] I have to ask which is the alternative route?"
He said the R55 and the R511, which were said to be the alternative roads, were in dismal conditions.
"Let me put it bluntly: the [R55] is in a very poor state."
The hearings are being held to give affected parties an opportunity to share with the government their views about the proposed e-tolling.
Abramjee said capping tolls at R550 a month was small comfort.
This was a large amount of money for many people and would make life harder for them day-to-day.
He called being taxed on urban roads an unjust law.
"Do the right thing. Postpone it and listen to the people."
Tolls explained
More than 200 people attended the public hearing at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research on Wednesday.
They were given a chance to raise their questions after the technical implementation of e-tolling was explained.
People asked about the prosecutions of offenders, enforcement and transparency in the building contract. Calls for a referendum were also made.
However, people jeered and shouted down most of the answers given by a panel consisting of the SA National Roads Agency Limited and the National Treasury.
At one stage, a man who felt his question had not been properly answered called for a vote of no confidence in the meeting and suggested a walkout. More than a quarter of the room followed him.
The meeting came to an end shortly before 21:00. Most people there were unhappy at the outcome.
Centurion resident Corneleus Parkin described it as "pointless".
"... It really feels like they have made up their minds. It feels like we are fighting a losing battle."
Phases
In October, the transport department instructed Sanral to suspend all processes related to the tolling of national roads.
The suspension included the planned phase two of the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Plan, the Cape Winelands and the Wild Coast.
"It is important to note that there's a clear distinction or separation between phase one [almost completed] and phase two [no work has started as yet]," said transport spokesperson Tiyane Rikhotso.
He said phase one was almost complete and that the department wanted to hear alternative views from the public on the best possible model of financing the debt which had been incurred.
Last month, the government and Sanral announced new tariffs for the proposed e-tolling.
The announcement, made on October 26, marked the beginning of a 30-day public consultation process, after which Transport Minister Ben Martins would have a fortnight to "apply his mind", followed by another fortnight to gazette the final tariffs.
This means e-tolls could come into effect four days before Christmas.
The government has already contributed R5.75bn to the project, or 25% of the total debt owed by Sanral.
- SAPA
Read more on: cosatu | sanral | johannesburg | pretoria | transport | tolls
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