Ministers appeal for calm in Uber/taxi dispute

File picture: Toby Melville/Reuters

File picture: Toby Melville/Reuters

Published Jul 20, 2017

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Johannesburg - Police minister Fikile Mbalula and transport minister Joe Maswanganyi have appealed for calm in the dispute between metered taxis and Uber.

The appeal for calm was issued after Mbalula and Maswanganyi met on Wednesday and discussed the increasing violent attacks involving the metered taxi operators and e-hailing operators such as Uber.

A joint statement issued on Thursday by the Government Communication and Information System on behalf of the transport and police departments said: "The ministers appealed for calm whilst government is finalising the National Land Transport Act Amendment Bill which is currently before parliament. The Amendment Bill will include e-hailing public transport services."

Permit required

The statement said the ministers also emphasised the provision of the National Land Transport Act on the regulation of road-based public transport. This stipulates that no person may operate a road-based public transport service, unless he or she is the holder of an operating licence or a permit, subject to sections 47, 48 and 49 of this Act.

"This regulation therefore means that any operator who operates a public transport service without an Operating Licence will be violating the law and Law Enforcement Officers will act on such an operator."

Petrol-bombed

On Monday Uber driver Lindelani Mashau, who had been in ICU for several weeks, died after suffering serious burn wounds when his car was set alight, allegedly by metered-taxi operators. in a petrol-bomb attack in June in Pretoria.

Mbalula and Maswanganyi strongly warned the affected parties to immediately cease acts of intimidation and disorder that have engulfed the industry.  

"Following this meeting, the law enforcement agencies will be deployed in all the identified hotspots," the statement reads, "and perpetrators of violence and intimidation will be arrested.The ministers also appealed to the affected parties to stop any public spats that fuel and prolong the tension."

African News Agency

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