The Zimbabwe Independent

Transport blues a man-made chaos

- TENDAI MAKARIPE

SENZENI na? senzeni na? senzi na? senzeni na?

(What have we done?) ese are opening lines to a timeless, yet emotionall­y charged South African struggle song that is a passionate plea for answers from a troubled and tormented soul.

So powerful are the lyrics that South African activist Duma Ndlovu compared its influence to that of the American protest song We Shall Overcome. It is a gospel song that became a protest song and a key anthem of the American civil rights movement.

Troubled by the assassinat­ion of a South African veteran of the anti-apartheid struggle, Chris Hani, by radical right-wing Polish immigrant Janusz Waluś on April 10, 1993, Zimbabwean poet Albert Nyathi penned his own rendition of Senzeni na?

Despite using a different melody and altered lyrics, Nyathi’s song is gravid with emotion, questionin­g the existence of injustice, the façade of peace, and the unpitying slaying of Africa’s most gallant sons.

e song is pertinent today as it was in the 1950s.

e ordinary man in the street today replays the song in his heart as the country’s teething troubles continue to bite.

While standing in long and winding queues for more than two hours waiting for public transport at Harare’s main bus terminuses, Copacabana, Market Square, and Fourth Street, one cannot help but question what he or she did to be in such a predicamen­t.

In the queues, one comes across the visibly infirm, the grey-haired, and those living with disabiliti­es dejectedly waiting for hours for transport to take them home.

Should public transport be such a hassle to the extent that terminuses morph into battlegrou­nds for fistfights over a seat on the bus?

How many people do we need to see collapsing due to exhaustion or different ailments as they wait for transport?

Kenya’s Nairobi Metropolit­an Area Transport Authority’s plans to introduce high-quality Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) services on five corridors are at an advanced stage. e BRT is a bus-based public transport system that delivers fast, comfortabl­e, and cost-effective services within metropolit­an areas.

In Tanzania, research has shown that an efficient BRT system is rooted in diligent planning, sound operationa­l and business models, integratio­n between BRT and other modes of transport, efficient informatio­n technology systems, and an automatic fare collection system.

When locals juxtapose what other countries are doing versus what they see in their own state, one question pops up, senzeni na?

A country whose urban transport system is tottering on the brink of collapse is worsened by the deployment of police and city council “operations” that are not only out of touch with reality but expose the country as one suffering from serious policy deficienci­es.

Last week, a crackdown on private vehicles that were helping ease urban transport woes resulted in a serious crisis that led to an unpreceden­ted rise in transport fares.

As much as US$3 was being charged for a trip to Chitungwiz­a, US$2 to Mufakose, and US$2 to Damafalls, among other outrageous fares.

“e transport situation is getting out of hand. Government should introduce operations after clearly examining exhaustive­ly their immediate implicatio­ns. e current one has worsened the transport situation,” Dzivarasek­wa resident Macdonald Matimba said.

People get home late, exposing themselves to marauding robbers, who have developed a penchant for killing.

Social commentato­r Lazarus Sauti said: “Transport blues are proving to be a pandemic in Zimbabwe. People are struggling to get cheap transport to and from work.

e costs are also prohibitiv­e as they are eating up the largest chunk of people’s salaries.

“Government needs to act quickly by introducin­g an effective integrated transport management system, which includes road, rail, and air transport”.

In the midst of this man-made chaos, the ordinary man in the street ponders what exactly he did wrong to deserve this.

Still smarting from transport distresses, citizens are grappling with skyrocketi­ng prices of basic commoditie­s as inflation continues to rise.

While the gospel of budget surpluses continues to be preached, unabated facts presented by the World Bank (WB) in its social and economic update revealed that 7,9 million people in Zimbabwe fell into extreme poverty in the past decade and are living under the food poverty datum line of US$29,80 per person a month.

Further, the latest data from the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency noted that a family of six now requires ZW$68 178 (US$428) to meet basic needs per month.

is on the parallel market is equivalent to US$170, which is insufficie­nt to pay for rent, water and electricit­y bills, food, and transport for a family of six.

Analyst Tanaka Mandizvidz­a argues that fiscal discipline and budgetary control are needed to ensure the government has surplus money to invest in infrastruc­ture and industrial developmen­t.

“e government should also rein in sacred cows involved in nepotism and corruption so as to ensure accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, which are principles of good governance. Sound institutio­nal reforms are also needed to strengthen instrument­s of policy-making and governance,” Mandizvidz­a said.

Further compoundin­g the problems of citizens is the recent spike in school fees.

 ?? ?? Transport crisis ... Commuters are enduring long queues and a shortage of buses.
Transport crisis ... Commuters are enduring long queues and a shortage of buses.

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