SOUTH AFRICAN GOVERNMENT APPROACHES CONSTITUTIONAL COURT ON E-TOLL RULING
Pursuant to the decision by Cabinet at its meeting on May 16 2012, the Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan, has applied on behalf of the South African government to the Constitutional Court of South Africa for leave to appeal against the interdict by the North Gauteng High Court stopping the South African National Roads Agency Limited (SANRAL) from collecting tolls on certain roads in the Gauteng Province.
Minister Gordhan is being supported by the Minister of Transport, the Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs, the MEC of Roads and Transport (Gauteng) and SANRAL.
The South African government is of the view that Justice Prinsloo's judgement is an unprecedented intervention in public finance matters and is a fundamental breach of the division of powers as stipulated in the Constitution.
"At the heart of the dispute in this case, lies a fundamental issue regarding separation of powers and whether or not a Court can exercise discretionary judgement over a governmental policy decision on appropriate funding mechanisms, revenue sources and the allocation of nationally raised revenue," Gordhan says in court papers.
The Government decided in 2007, in terms of provisions of the SANRAL Act and after extensive planning and consultation, to finance the construction and maintenance of an improved Gauteng Freeway system through raising debt, to be repaid through open road tolling revenue.