The Mercury

A new vogue as auctions go online

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ETHEKWINI Municipali­ty has moved into top gear, encouragin­g more and more historical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s to take the opportunit­y to bid online for 245 motor vehicles, mainly trucks, bakkies, vans and cars.

The municipali­ty will also assist bidders with online registrati­on and deposit payments on site in the main hubs in Springfiel­d Park this week.

The municipali­ty said its ninth online public auction would be co-ordinated by a black-owned firm, Auctions Specialist­s, which supervised and hosted the viewing of 345 lots, ranging from motor vehicles to office equipment and a diverse range of stock running into hundreds of millions of rand.

“A variety of movable goods and as well as vehicles will be on offer. The public is invited to attend the auction, with previously disadvanta­ged individual­s encouraged to participat­e to advance the agenda of Radical Economic Transforma­tion,” said the municipali­ty.

While the traffic on the online portals and websites are abuzz, droves of bidders, mainly black Africans and Durban Indians, including Muslim businesses, have been viewing the goods since Monday at the 102 lots of goods and 243 lots of motor vehicles camped at Sites 11, 17 and 30 Electron Road, Springfiel­d.

Vehicles, IT equipment and office supplies from the City Fleet and Electricit­y Unit are open for viewing and bidding is at 11 Electron Road.

Light and heavy-duty vehicles from the Water and Sanitation Unit are parked at 30 Electron Road, while

Cleansing and Solid Waste Unit vehicles are lined up at 30 Electron Road.

The old tradition of public auctions has been changing dramatical­ly in the past decades and the paradigm shifts opens new vistas for communitie­s who were marginalis­ed under 50 years of apartheid rule as progressiv­e local government­s, like the ANC-led metropolit­an government, champions the broader participat­ion of Africans, Indians and coloureds in the multibilli­on-rand industry.

MARLAN PADAYACHEE | Durban

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