Thursday, May 18, 2017
Trains Overcrowded in South Africa's Most Congested City
Train
commuters in Cape Town complain of overcrowding and delays, adding that they
arrived late for work and, with winter arriving, they returned home after dark,
making them vulnerable to criminals. According to the TomTom traffic index Cape Town is the most congested
city in the country and 48th in the world, ahead of cities such as New York.
For rail commuters, the situation isn't much better, with trains overcrowded to
the point of bursting and long delays. GroundUp found people clinging from the
outside to coaches and even locomotives. Some trains were only six coaches
long. Daphne Kayster, Western Cape PRASA (Passenger Rail Agency of South
Africa) Acting Marketing and Communication Manager said the equivalent of 11
train sets were destroyed by arson between October 2015 and April 2017. "The
main reason for the dramatic decrease in train performance is directly related
to pressure on the fleet due to losses from train fires as well as vandalism to
the infrastructure as a result of arson and community protests," she said.
"The demand for services far exceeds the available train supply as a
result of decades of disinvestment in rail and unprecedented growth of informal
settlements. "The continuous theft or vandalism of assets, mainly cables
and other metal bearing components has led to a situation where services have
generally been unreliable and therefore not meeting customer
expectations," said Kayster. Commuters, however, blame Metrorail for the
increasingly poor service, and reports of corruption and mismanagement in PRASA lend weight
to their view. GroundUp spoke to a number of commuters.
They said they arrived
late for work and with winter arriving they returned home after dark making
them vulnerable to criminals. Mzwandile Cuba of Langa, 60 and a father of five,
said it was often impossible for him to make it on time to work. "I
usually caught a 7:17am Cape Town-bound-via-Pinelands train and changed at
Maitland for my work at Elsies River." But that train is now so
overcrowded he has to wait for the next one. He says his employers do not
understand his difficulty and have issued him with harsh warnings. He tried
getting the earlier 7:20am train, but it was very often delayed. Lucy Somtsewu,
41 of Gugulethu and a mother of two, travelled every weekday on a Cape
Town-bound train for Mutual. She says the situation is now so bad that instead
of her monthly R150 train ticket for Nyanga to Mutual Station she has to spend
R32 a day on a taxi to get to work (R19 to Mutual and R13 for a return to
Gugulethu). Mavis Bhelesi, 58 and a mother of two, said it was usually only one
day in a week that the trains were on time on her route of Nonkqubela Station
(Site B, Khayelitsha) to Bellville. "I was normally supposed to catch a
6am train and start work at 8:30am, but I am compelled to catch an earlier
train because of the serious delays," she said. "I have used trains
for more than 30 years ... but the issue appears too appalling nowadays ...
much worse since PRASA took over in the past few years." "The
company's personnel tell us to move to another transport mode every time we
lodge complaints with them," she said.
SOURCE: All
Africa News
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