Court will hear e-toll application

Etoll, E-toll, gantry, toll road, toll gate. Freeway / highway N3 between Beyers Naude and Linksfield. 18 March 2012. Generic illustrative highway pic, caption as needed. Picture: Karen Sandison

Etoll, E-toll, gantry, toll road, toll gate. Freeway / highway N3 between Beyers Naude and Linksfield. 18 March 2012. Generic illustrative highway pic, caption as needed. Picture: Karen Sandison

Published Apr 24, 2012

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Johannesburg - The Pretoria High Court will hear an application by the Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (Outa) on Tuesday for an urgent interdict preventing Sanral from launching the e-toll system.

“This (interdict) is to give judges time to review arguments in the matter and then make a decision on whether to have the system outlawed or not,” Outa chairperson Wayne Duvenhage said on Monday.

“The entire e-tolling process is very complex and expensive, and it's going to be costly to manage.”

Civil society, the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the Democratic Alliance were pulling out all the stops this week in last-minute attempts to have the system scrapped.

The DA planned to show its support for Outa by protesting outside the courthouse on Tuesday from 10am.

Spokesperson Kelly Miller said DA members would be out in full force, and she called on the public and other organisations to join them.

Cosatu, which has a membership of two million, plans countrywide mass protests.

A protest was planned at the South African National Roads Agency Limited's (Sanral) offices on Wednesday, Cosatu spokesperson Patrick Craven said.

“The marches will culminate next Monday (April 30), the day of the launch, and there will be big marches in all main city centres,” he said.

A court application has also been filed by lobby group AfriForum. - Sapa

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