Taxi strike: Operators boo deputy transport minister off stage
The booing started when she called on them to observe social distancing, and also asked them to sanitise their hands.
Taxi operators blockaded roads on Wednesday as they sought outstanding money from government’s Covid-19 relief fund for the taxi industry, 18 November 2020. Image: Jacques Nelle
Deputy Transport Minister Dikeledi Magadzi was booed off stage by striking members of the National Taxi Alliance in Pretoria on Wednesday.
Magadzi was accepting a memorandum of demands from the NTA leadership on behalf of Minister Fikile Mbalula, when she was booed.
While accepting the memorandum, Magadzi was on top of an open truck, together with the NTA leadership, and was cheered and even praised by some on the ground.
Some clapped their hands and whistled as she promised to respond to their demands.
They even called her a “hero” who was willing to listen to their demands.
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However, a few minutes later, things heated when Magadzi started addressing striking taxi operators.
She called on them to observe social distancing, as they were crowded and standing too close to each other, and also asked them to sanitise their hands.
They then booed her, with some telling her that, when ANC members were protesting in Bloemfontein on Friday, they were never told about social distancing.
“Why us? You started right, and now you are insulting us. We are adults and we know what we are doing. Your duty is to accept our memorandum and not to teach us about the coronavirus,” a man from the crowd near the media shouted at Magadzi.
They then drowned her out with their loud voices, forcing the deputy minister to get off the truck, before being ushered by police and bodyguards to her offices.
Addressing members outside the Department of Transport offices, NTA president Francis Masitsa said they want what has been promised to them by Mbalula.
“Mbalula, we want our money, if not we shall meet somewhere. If Mbalula wants us to disrespect him, we will do so. South Africa is a democratic country, not some monarchy.
“There are laws in line with the Constitution that govern this country. We take instructions from no one, least of all from the minister. We are prepared to engage with Mbalula. However, the incompetency in this department is of the highest order,” said Masitsa.
Masitsa has also denied allegations that NTA members assaulted a City of Tshwane bus driver and later hijacked the vehicle earlier in the morning.
Masitsa claimed that their members were not violent and that those who had hijacked a bus were not NTA affiliates, but those who had infiltrated his organisation.
NTA general-secretary Alpheus Mlalazi claimed that Mbalula was biased towards, and favoured, Santaco and was deliberately ignoring them.
“Your (Mbalula) public speeches to force the (national taxi) lekgotla resolution on us, challenged your inability of understanding the rules governing the taxi industry. That lekgotla was a meeting by Mbalula and his friends. Those resolutions don’t have an impact on us as NTA.
“Mbalula, respect NTA as an independent body, recognise NTA as a critical stakeholder in the taxi industry and public transport sector. We bought our cars, we didn’t receive them for free. We are not funded by government. We work hard for our money. You must immediately publish the taxi industry subsidy as promised,” Mlalazi said.
Among their demands, NTA has given Mbalula an ultimatum to respond to their written grievances contained in letters dated 26 August and 30 September.
The association said it was also aggrieved by Mbalula’s intransigence in affording it a right enshrined in Section 18 of the Bill of Rights – freedom of association.
They want Mbalula to release the Covid-19 relief fund he had earlier promised for the benefit of deserving taxi drivers and taxi operators.
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