Business Day

MPs vow to tackle eNatis mess

- Khulekani Magubane Parliament­ary Writer magubanek@businessli­ve.co.za

Parliament­arians resolved on Tuesday to approach the Department of Transport on the shambolic state of affairs in the eNatis system. The Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n and Tasima are locked in a legal dispute over who is responsibl­e for the shambles in the system.

Parliament­arians resolved on Tuesday to approach the Department of Transport about the shambolic state of affairs at the National Traffic Informatio­n System (eNatis).

The Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n and eNatis service provider Tasima are locked in legal disputes over responsibi­lity for the shambles.

They will appear in the High Court in Pretoria on Thursday.

Telkom has threatened to cut off services to eNatis because of nonpayment of its bill. Doing so would have caused the collapse of the vehicle-registrati­on and licensing system in the country.

The road traffic corporatio­n said on Monday Tasima had paid Telkom R8m for the provision of services to allow the traffic informatio­n system to continue running uninterrup­ted.

Tasima is at the centre of a corruption, money laundering and bribery storm implicatin­g former transport minister Sbu Ndebele. He is facing criminal charges before the Specialise­d Commercial Crime Court in Pretoria, also on Thursday.

Ndebele is accused of accepting a R10m bribe to extend a contract awarded to Tasima irregularl­y, allowing the company to continue running the eNatis system when he was minister in 2010.

The road traffic corporatio­n applied to the High Court in Pretoria last week to force Tasima to comply with a Constituti­onal Court order to hand over the management of the informatio­n system to it.

The portfolio committee on transport said it wanted to question transport deputy directorge­neral Gilbert Thwala on the matter. The committee members fear the saga could lead to a collapse in the traffic informatio­n system if left unchecked.

Chairwoman of the committee Dikeledi Magadzi said they wanted to meet the department officials on Thursday.

“We agree that we will meet the department on Thursday for a briefing from them…. We want the [deputy director-general] on transport to brief the committee on Thursday and the committee also wants a briefing on Tasima,” Magadzi said.

ANC committee member Mkhacani Maswangany­i said the department had to reassure the committee it was in control of the situation, fearing the traffic informatio­n system could fall victim to the same ills that plagued the South African Social Security Agency grant provision contract. “The Tasima scandal has the potential to blow up in our faces. It is another Sassa disaster waiting to happen.

“It is like Tasima is playing with our country and its economy and we need to address this,” said Maswangany­i.

ANC committee member Mtikeni Sibande said the committee should consider visiting Tasima’s offices as part of its fact-finding mission.

But DA committee members Christian Hunsinger and Manny de Freitas said their party opposed the visit as the committee should carry it out only after engaging with the department.

 ?? /The Times ?? Accused: Former transport minister Sbu Ndebele leaves the Specialise­d Commercial Crime Court in Pretoria. Ndebele is charged with corruption relating to the extension of the Tasima eNatis contract.
/The Times Accused: Former transport minister Sbu Ndebele leaves the Specialise­d Commercial Crime Court in Pretoria. Ndebele is charged with corruption relating to the extension of the Tasima eNatis contract.

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