Financial Mail

End of the line for a journey of joy

The collapse of SA’s railway network through theft, vandalism and sabotage is one of our great calamities

- Archie Henderson

The tragedy of our collapsed railway network is not only economic; it will also deprive thousands of the joy of travelling by train. Now that train travel is no longer an exclusivel­y white privilege, its demise is even sadder.

The collapse has been documented in an 8,000word report by FM contributi­ng editor David Williams in April-May for the Brenthurst Foundation and was picked up by the Sunday press at the weekend. It’s grim reading: R364m lost to looting and sabotage, 66% of overhead cables on 3,000km of railways stolen that will cost about R500,000 a kilometre to restore, and more. And that’s just a fragment of the report.

Williams is the ideal investigat­or/author for such a report. In his days as a journalist on the FM, especially as deputy editor, he often wrote about the railways. As the son of an SA Railways & Harbours electricia­n, he was also a child of the railroad whose alarm clock in a small redbrick railway house on cold Estcourt mornings was the noise of shunting trains. It didn’t put him off railways, just the opposite — and he loves the railroad still.

That love also makes him optimistic about fixing the broken network, but he admits it will takes billions — and also dedicated and experience­d managers, like the ones he met in his research but of whom there are perhaps too few. “It’s not easy to run a railroad,” says Williams. “Prasa [the Passenger Rail Agency of SA] has net assets of about R120bn in locomotive­s, infrastruc­ture and land. [All of that] needs good management.”

 ?? Freddy Mavunda ?? Stripped: R364m of rail infrastruc­ture has been lost to looting and sabotage
Freddy Mavunda Stripped: R364m of rail infrastruc­ture has been lost to looting and sabotage

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