Charging motorists to use existing roads is immoral, and the new
toll-road system in South Africa should be suspended immediately, the
justice and peace department of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’
Conference has said.
South Africa’s parliament is set to pass a bill that will amend the
law on road tolls and allow for the electronic collection of tolls and
the prosecution of those who fail to pay.
A statement signed by Bishop Abel Gabuza of Kimberley and Bishop
Kevin Dowling of Rustenburg said: “Existing freeways, which serve as the
main arterial routes within the economic hub of our country, have been
appropriated to create toll roads, while no viable alternative routes
exist.
“This is a serious abdication of government responsibility for public property.”
The government insists that charging tolls is the only viable way to pay for the maintenance of the country’s freeways.
The “massive escalations in cost” of the road upgrades that led to
the toll system “indicate that some serious investigations need to be
initiated regarding possible corruption or price-fixing,” the bishops
said.
They called for an immediate independent inquiry and said motorists
should not pay the toll fees “until all the matters of concern have been
addressed appropriately.”
The toll fees will raise the cost of living, which will “inevitably
hurt the poorest among us, at a time when there have been far too many
attacks on their ability to survive,” the bishops added.
They noted that the government is failing to address South Africa’s
“desperate need” for an affordable, integrated public transport system.