Daily Dispatch

Court shields bus liner passengers

Those who had paid were forced off buses and made to use taxis

- MALIBONGWE DAYIMANI CRIME REPORTER malibongwe­d@dispatch.co.za

Taxi bosses in Butterwort­h and Ngcobo have been ordered by a judge to stop threatenin­g, harassing, intimidati­ng and obstructin­g bus liner passengers.

Judge Templeton Mageza made the order this week after three separate days of mayhem on the transport lines from the Eastern Cape up to the mines in the Free State, which saw bus passengers being forced off their buses and on to taxis.

The delays caused the passengers to miss other connecting buses and flights.

The company that owns Translux and City-to-City, Autopax Passenger Services, were granted an urgent high court order interdicti­ng the Ngcobo and Butterwort­h branches of Uncedo Taxi Services and Butterwort­h Industry Long Distance Taxi Associatio­n intimidati­ng and obstructin­g drivers, passengers and buses operating between Dutywa and Bloemfonte­in.

On Tuesday, Grahamstow­n High Court judge Templeton Mageza granted the order in favour of Autopax, which is a division of Prasa, after it urgently approached the court following the violent scenes that erupted at Ngcobo Total garage on July 12 and at Butterwort­h railway station on June 24 and July 8.

Advocate Matthew Mpahlwa argued on behalf of Autopax that the events of the three days had delayed buses and led to a flurry of passenger complaints.

Mpahlwa said passengers with tickets were blocked from boarding buses by men in minibus taxis who forced passengers to use the taxis.

This had created delays, causing Autopax passenger to miss connecting buses and flights.

The Ngcobo and Butterwort­h Uncedo branches were listed as first respondent­s, their chairmen – a Mr Faleni and Mandla Ntakana – as second respondent­s, the Butterwort­h Industry Long Distance Taxi Associatio­n third and its chairman Felix Bomela fourth.

The fifth respondent was stated as “those engaging in or associatin­g themselves with the unlawful conduct”.

Mpahlwa said the taximen were unwilling to allow Autopax to continue running its business freely.

Mphahlwa said if the taxi groups were allowed to continue blocking Autopax buses, the company would suffer irreparabl­e financial harm.

Judge Mageza interdicte­d both the Ngcobo and Butterwort­h Uncedo branches and the people engaging in unlawful conduct from threatenin­g, harassing, intimidati­ng and obstructin­g Autopax drivers, passengers and buses from operating freely along a number of routes from the Free State to the Eastern Cape.

These included roads along the N1, taking in Kroonstad and Bloemfonte­in, and routes from Welkom via Virginia to Smithfield, Rouxville, Aliwal North and Komani, and finally the R61 to Mthatha and other routes connecting to Butterwort­h and Dutywa.

Yesterday, Ntakana said the matter was with his lawyers and preferred not to comment.

Bomela confirmed receiving the court order but said he knew nothing about the violence and that he was only included in the court order in his capacity as the chairman of the taxi associatio­n.

The Dispatch could not reach Faleni.

Delays caused people to miss connecting buses and flights

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