Daily Dispatch

Taxi owner’s new app hailed for its versatile features

- By MBALI TANANA

FINALLY a local taxi operator with a national footprint has a taxi-hire app up and running – ready to use, just a tap away.

The Ntuza applicatio­n is the brainchild of Mdantsane-born Eugene “Ntuza” Ntuthuzelo Mfaka CEO of Eugene’s Executive Shuttle, who has spent more than a year working on the project.

In addition to making hiring a private driver easy, the applicatio­n, which on a smartphone is used to hail taxis from the Ntuza fleet, also offers ambulance services through Alderson Ambulances, and has a database of all registered traditiona­l nurses, in a bid to reduce the number of deaths among initiates as a result of botched circumcisi­ons.

The long-awaited applicatio­n was launched at the East London Internatio­nal Convention Centre on Friday where key transport stakeholde­rs, partners and sponsors pledged their support.

Stakeholde­rs included East London car dealers Honda, Ronnies Motors and associate sponsor Suzuki, from whom Mfaka purchased four of his fleet vehicles.

Mfaka, a civil engineer by profession currently pursuing his masters, said he had no idea what would happen in his life when he resigned from the Eastern Cape Developmen­t Corporatio­n, where he had been working as a project manager.

“Understand­ably my wife had many insecuriti­es about me resigning because she was unemployed at the time, and did not let me quit my job until I had a plan,” he said.

“When I tabled my ideas, I won. Everything was driven by faith. I traded in my bakkie for a MercedesBe­nz, which I started [Eugene’s Executive Shuttle] with, and by the end of that year I already had five of these vehicles from Ronnies, and I had a turnover of about R30 000 a month. It has just grown from strength to strength since.”

Alderson Ambulances public relations manager Ayanda Mbango said they were happy to be working with the Ntuza app, as it could help them penetrate more communitie­s.

“The partnershi­p makes sense because we work with people and transporta­tion, and the security features of the applicatio­n can help us respond to genuine calls as opposed to the many hoax calls, which waste our time,” he said.

Acting visible policing commander at the East London police station, Lieutenant Colonel Jongisizwe Manyisani echoed those sentiments. “I wish our institutio­n could adapt this technology for our call centres because it could save us from the challenge of responding to hoax calls. It can help police respond promptly, knowing instantly who is calling and from which location.

“Many members are pedestrian­s and desperate for transporta­tion. You find they end up utilising the many unregister­ed vehicles driven by unlicensed drivers,” he said, adding that using unregulate­d taxis meant police could become victims of crimes such as kidnapping.

“This app will reduce crime and human traffickin­g because passengers know before they board the vehicle who is collecting them and what the vehicle’s registrati­on is.”

Programme director Putco Mafani of Putco Mafani Consulting, which co-ordinated the launch of the app, said he was proud to be part of the initiative.

The app allows users to choose the vehicle they would like to transport them, and gives the price for the trip before the driver collects them.

“It’s a transport system that the people of South Africa can relate to and it speaks to the needs of our people, which is why the community needs to own it and support it. We should all be very proud; big ups to Ntuza,” he said.

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