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Taxi Violence In South Africa Linked To Unemployment Pressures, Says Transport Minister

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For many South Africans, the daily taxi commute is more than just a routine. It is a lifeline. But in parts of the country, especially in Cape Town, that lifeline is becoming increasingly fragile as violence continues to disrupt routes and put lives at risk.

Now, Transport Minister Barbara Creecy has pointed to a deeper issue behind the unrest. According to her, South Africa’s persistently high unemployment rate is adding fuel to an already volatile taxi industry.

Too Many Drivers, Too Few Routes

Speaking in a radio interview, Creecy explained that the taxi sector has become overcrowded, with more people trying to enter the industry than it can realistically support.

At the centre of the problem is competition for profitable routes. These routes are limited, but demand to operate on them keeps growing.

Creecy noted that when too many operators target the same routes, tensions escalate quickly. Those who are pushed out often fight back, leading to disputes that can turn violent.

Commuters Caught In The Crossfire

In Cape Town, residents have already felt the impact. Recent weeks have seen deadly shootings and taxis set alight, leaving commuters stranded and fearful.

For many working-class residents, taxis are the most accessible and sometimes the only affordable form of transport. When violence erupts, it is not just an industry issue. It becomes a community crisis.

Missed workdays, unsafe travel conditions and sudden route closures all add pressure to people who are already navigating a tough economic climate.

Violence Treated As Criminality

Creecy was clear in her stance that taxi violence cannot be excused or normalised. She stressed that these incidents must be treated as criminal acts, not just industry disputes.

This comes as tensions within taxi associations, including those linked to CATA, continue to make headlines following incidents of arson and ongoing protests by operators.

A System Under Strain

The minister’s comments highlight a broader reality. South Africa’s unemployment crisis is not only an economic issue. It is spilling into key sectors like transport, where informal and semi-formal industries absorb thousands of livelihoods.

The taxi industry has long operated as both a business and a survival mechanism. But as more people turn to it for income, the cracks are becoming harder to ignore.

What Happens Next

Creecy confirmed that taxi violence will be a focus area during the upcoming Easter Road Safety Campaign, with authorities adopting a zero-tolerance approach.

Whether this will be enough to stabilise the situation remains to be seen. For now, commuters continue to navigate uncertainty, while the underlying pressures driving the violence remain firmly in place.

{Source:EWN}

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