The Citizen (Gauteng)

More evidence of decay at Prasa

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The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) can be overlooked when the list of national disaster state-owned enterprise­s is considered. Eskom’s ever-present load shedding reminds us of the incompeten­ce and looting after the appointmen­t of Jacob Zuma as president.

And, when SA Airways perpetuall­y comes cap in hand looking for the same sort of government bailouts Eskom wants, Prasa blends into the background.

Yet the commuter train company is a cesspit of mismanagem­ent, breached procuremen­t rules and looting of billions of rands in taxpayers’ money.

Latest evidence of that is a system of supposedly automated gates at seven stations around the country – put in at a cost of almost R2 billion back in 2010 – which don’t work. Commuters in Cape Town must queue at manually operated gates.

The project tender winner, Siyangena Technologi­es, bid R1.1 billion – R400 million higher than another bidder. It later made a further R800 million when the contract was improperly extended.

Former Prasa CEO Lucky Montana is the one who has to account for this – and it is gratifying to see that there are already criminal cases pending against him in this regard.

The fear is that “Luckygate” is only the tip of a very rotten iceberg.

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