The Zimbabwe Independent

Zinara to plug leakages

- JULIA NDLELA

THE Zimbabwe National Roads Administra­tion (Zinara) is set to revamp its tolling infrastruc­ture as it seeks to plug revenue leakages that have been confrontin­g the parastatal’s operations.

This latest approach will culminate in the redevelopm­ent of seven tollgates beginning in April this year.

Most tollgates across the country have been subject to lax systems that have seen some vehicles passing without paying.

The targeted tollgates for upgrade and developmen­t include Norton, Skyline, Esigodini, Eskbank, Shamva, Dema and Shurugwi which will be upgraded in a phased manner while the rest will be revamped in 2023.

The tolling issue at the road administra­tor has been under serious spotlight with the current Intertoll Africa deal being subject to scrutiny. This has seen analysts and parliament­arians highlighti­ng that the arrangemen­t was no longer serving its purpose but rather milking the government of millions of dollars.

Zinara chief executive Nkosinathi Ncube told the Zimbabwe Independen­t that they were investing in tollgate rehabilita­tion to counand avoid revenue leakages.

“We are going to upgrade seven toll gates this year and Skyline is one of them while Norton, Esgodini, Eskbank, Shamva, Dema among others will be targeted. This will be done in phases,” he said.

“We hope that in the next three years all our toll gates will be up and running with fully-fledged infrastruc­ture.”

Ncube most tollgates are congested and the current infrastruc­ture requires upgrading that will culminate in increasing of lanes and improvemen­t of ICT which entails introducti­on of pre-payment models to reduce the time taken at the toll gate.

“We have already started with Norton to expand the busy gates,” he said, adding that there is adequate budget put aside for rehabilita­tion of toll gates without disclosing the figures.

Zinara this week held a press conference where a ZW$17 billion (US$137 million) budget on road rehabilita­tion was announced. Ncube admitted that the state of the roads was poor hence the need for rehabilita­tion. “The amount that we collect as Zinara and what is required for the roads don’t tally. We collect maybe 10% of what could actually be enough in the country for the roads to be fully fixed.”

Ncube noted that Zinara is dependent on collection­s and that has proven inadequate hence a proposal for the government to open room for third party funding from private players.

“We are currently working with the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Transport and other government agencies to see what other sources of funding can be looked at so as to accelerate road rehabilita­tion,” Ncube said.

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Zinara chief executive Nkosinathi Ncube
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