The Herald (South Africa)

Eastern Cape drivers ‘among worst’ in SA

- Estelle Ellis ellise@timesmedia.co.za

THE Eastern Cape has some of the worst taxis in the country with “horrific speeding records” – but only 23 public transport inspectors.

“This unit [public transport policing] is chronicall­y under-resourced,” Transport MEC Thandiswa Marawu said in her strategic plan for the next two years.

Research published earlier this year by the University of Stellenbos­ch’s Thinus Booysen tracked taxis travelling between Mthatha and Cape Town and found that they more often than not exceeded the 100km/h speed limit, with some of them clocking speeds of up to 159km/h.

Booysen said most of the drivers he spoke to did not even know that the maximum speed limit for taxis was 100km/h.

“They told me the speed limit for taxis was 120km/h. They also claimed the passengers encouraged them to speed.”

He said the maximum taxi speed recorded was 159km/h on the road between Worcester and Laingsburg. Taxis also clocked speeds of more than 150km/h on the road between Queenstown and Comfimvaba.

The average speed between Laingsburg and Worcester, when the taxi drivers were on their “home stretch”, was “a disturbing 137km/h”, Booysen said.

Eastern Cape Transport Department spokesman Ncedo Kumbaca said apart from the 23 public transport inspectors, there was no other focused law enforcemen­t strategy for taxis in the province.

“Road safety is about everybody using the roads; we will not single out the taxis.”

In its latest survey of vehicles on the country’s roads, the Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n identified the Eastern Cape’s taxis as among the worst.

It found 12.6% of the province’s taxis had lights that did not work and 4% had worn tyres.

The Eastern Cape also scored the highest for the number of drunk drivers, with about 1% being under the influence in the day time and 1.6% at night, 1.7% did not have driver’s licences and 3.7% did not have public driver’s permits.

SA National Associatio­n of Taxi Owners spokesman Phillip Taaibosch said the organisati­on was concerned about the high number of taxi accidents.

“We have started a safety campaign called Hlokomela,” he said.

The campaign is aimed at ensuring that owners and drivers work together to get passengers safely to their destinatio­n.

Aurora Hospital rehabilita­tion expert Dr Rob Campbell said in his experience speed and drunk-driving were two of the main causes of taxi accidents in the province.

“In some instances, the taxi might not have caused the accident but due to problemati­c structural integrity – passengers not wearing seatbelts, overloadin­g and speeding – the accidents often have catastroph­ic consequenc­es.”

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