Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Picked Out

Coal-line criminals identified, must be jailed – Transnet

- MARTIN CREAMER | CREAMER MEDIA PUBLISHING EDITOR

The criminal syndicates that regularly bring South Africa’s coal export line to a halt have been identified through the intelligen­ce operations that are conducted by Transnet Freight Rail (TFR).

What is lacking is the ability of lawenforce­ment agencies to then work on informatio­n, see to conviction­s and ensure that members of the syndicates are sentenced appropriat­ely and are not released so that they are able to repeatedly resume their criminal behaviour.

TFR North Corridor acting managing executive Theo Johnson emphasised this during a nineteenth Southern African Coal Conference panel discussion chaired by McCloskey Southern African Coal Report’s Randy Fabi, with panellists including Grindrod CEO Xolani Mbambo, Road Freight Associatio­n CEO Gavin Kelly, Richards Bay Coal Terminal CEO Alan Waller and Turing Insights MD Matthias Brodner.

Johnson called for an end to criminal syndicate members being released so that they can return to recommit the same crimes.

He highlighte­d the need for all spheres of government to work together to ensure identified syndicates were meaningful­ly sentenced.

“Syndicates know exactly where to pounce so that the coal line comes to a standstill and it’s something that’s of great concern to us,” Johnson told the 300 people present at the event covered by Engineerin­g News & Mining Weekly.

Fabi:If you know where they’re going to pounce, could you not just increase security around that area?

Johnson: They get smart. When you close one gap, they go on to another. You are not dealing with people who do not know what they are doing. They hit you during shift changes. When you close that gap, they will hit you just down the road and then you come to a standstill.

While the pattern of criminalit­y was now known, a collective move to the next layer of prevention was now essential.

“We need the next layer to be effective so that once they are identified, they can be put away so that we can operate the system.”

Fabi: I know you’re slowly trying to rewire the train tracks to have less copper. Do you think that will lead to a significan­t decline in cable theft?

Johnson: We are rewiring. It is a massive project which has to be done while you are operating, so we usually target our annual maintenanc­e period when we close the line for about ten days and do the switching project. It’s going to take quite long but the good thing is it has commenced now and critical parts of the network are being rewired so that the syndicates no longer steal copper cable from those areas. But when the Tiger wire (aluminium conductor steel reinforced, or ACSR, wire not bought by scrap dealers) is cut and it just gets left there, that points to sabotage and those are the incidents that we need to bring to an end.

Partnershi­p with Industry

Transnet, in partnershi­p with industry, is intensifyi­ng the deployment of security measures to reduce cable theft and infrastruc­ture damage through vandalism.

Transnet and the Richards Bay Coal Terminal signed a mutual cooperatio­n agreement in November, which allows for collaborat­ion on fast-tracking maintenanc­e and operations sustaining procuremen­t. Even as early as the end of December, this agreement was showing clear signs of improving performanc­e.

 ?? ?? COMPARING NOTES From left, Randy Fabi, Alan Waller, Gavin Kelly, Xolani Mbambo, Theo Johnson and Matthias Brodner during a panel discussion at the nineteenth Southern African Coal Conference
COMPARING NOTES From left, Randy Fabi, Alan Waller, Gavin Kelly, Xolani Mbambo, Theo Johnson and Matthias Brodner during a panel discussion at the nineteenth Southern African Coal Conference

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