The Star Early Edition

Toyota to discuss issues

Meeting within the next week to debate the complaints of the operators

- Roy Cokayne

SENIOR executives from Toyota South Africa Motors’ (TSAM) and taxi industry leaders will be meeting within the next week to discuss the complaints of taxi operators following the blockade yesterday of the vehicle manufactur­er’s plant in Prospecton in Durban by thousands of taxis.

The protest halted production at the plant.

MP Filtane, a spokespers­on for Mass Taxi Industry Protest Action Committee, which organised the blockade to protest the taxi industry’s total exclusion from the industry’s value chain, confirmed yesterday that the protest at Toyota SA had been suspended and they would be meeting with TSAM’s senior management within the next week to discuss the complaints of taxi operators.

Filtane said that they had always indicated that the duration of the protest action would depend on the response from targeted entities.

Suben Moodley, the senior vice-president corporate services at TSAM, confirmed yesterday that almost 600 units of production were lost over two shifts at the plant because of the blockade.

“Toyota SA was informed about the planned march and advised staff not to come to work today (yesterday).

However, staff working the previous night’s shift were unable to exit the plant until the protest action was over.

“Our production division is evaluating the need for mitigation efforts,” he said.

Moodley was unable to quantify the cost to TSAM of the lost production.

He added that TSAM executives had received a memorandum from SA National Taxi Council representa­tives and it was currently being reviewed “to evaluate the requests”.

Moodley said TSAM would engage with Santaco executives once the memorandum had been evaluated.

A copy of the memorandum handed to TSAM executives by the protesters contains a list of demands, including that Toyota SA must stop actively supporting and encouragin­g extremely bad trading practices.

It said that through these transactio­ns, the industry was “coerced” and manipulate­d, with the active participat­ion of Toyota SA and SA Taxi, to enter into unaffordab­le transactio­ns that led to the demise of small businesses and the destructio­n of thousands of hard working South African families.

“Toyota must take responsibi­lity for the non-viable taxi deals which end up destroying the livelihood of taxi operations,” it said.

The memorandum also demanded that Toyota SA identify and finance 11 Toyota dealership­s to purchase a significan­t stake in 11 dedicated taxi owned taxi centre dealership­s that would be created countrywid­e for the sale of vehicles to taxi operators.

One taxi centre dealership would be establishe­d in each of the provinces, with the exception of KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng which would have two dealership­s, with all 11 dealership­s owned by the taxi industry.

The memorandum also demanded that Toyota SA must with immediate effect contribute “a royalty of R10 000” a taxi vehicle sold to the industry together with a retroactiv­e payment of an “original small royalty since cessation to date” for various purposes outlined in the memorandum.

It said Toyota must also participat­e in the establishm­ent and developmen­t of taxi industry owned financing activities.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Minibus taxi operators block the entrance to the Toyota manufactur­ing plant during morning rush hours in Durban yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS Minibus taxi operators block the entrance to the Toyota manufactur­ing plant during morning rush hours in Durban yesterday.

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