After years of delay, protests and legal action, a tolling system finally came into force on a large part of the freeway network of South Africa's richest province, Gauteng, amid threats by opponents to continue the fight against the tolls which they warn could cost the ruling African National Congress
Highway toll takes toll on ANC
Subscribe to listen
Motorists can obtain "e-tags," or electronic tags for their vehicles that register when they use the highways. A series of gantries with sensors built over the highways that ring and slice through Johannesburg and the capital, Pretoria, both in Gauteng province, register motorists' use of the roads.
There appears to be a growing disenchantment with the ANC, which was one of the leaders in the struggle against apartheid but has been facing criticism even within its own ranks lately, particularly from some of its trade unionist members. The dominant ruling alliance member has been criticized for, among other things, failing to stem corruption in government and among its own rank and file, for wasteful expenditure and failing to make good on delivery of basic services like water, electricity and education to the country's majority poor. However eroded its public support, an ANC victory on the national level still seems assured in the 2014 elections.
In one of the most recent scandals involving the ANC, the government has been accused of spending about $1.8 million of taxpayers' money to build homes for family members of President Jacob Zuma at his private homestead at Nkandla in the Kwazulu-Natal province.
The ANC has also been criticized for the Aug. 16, 2012, killings by police of striking platinum miners at Marikana, northwest of Johannesburg. Some allege that Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega and Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa, a close confidant of Zuma, may have given the go ahead for the police action against the miners on that day.
Wayne Duvenage of OUTA charged that the highway tolling system is over-priced and flawed. He believed that the government's lack of consultation on key areas of the system, such as pricing, means a wide sector of the public will boycott paying the tolls.
-AP