COSATU profit from e-tolling smacks of hypocrisy
COSATU's disapproving public stance on e-tolling as being "ill-conceived, corrupt, and too expensive for this country's poor" clearly does not apply to their investment arm.
The trade union federation reportedly made a tidy R24 million profit through an investment in a construction company which benefitted from the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project.
The City Press reported on Sunday that COSATU's investment arm, Kopano Ke Matla, holds a 3% stake in Raubex. Raubex received R800 million from a project which forms part of the Gauteng freeway project that has been at the centre of the e-tolling debacle. As Kopane's "sole beneficiary", COSATU have thus made a significant profit from a road-infrastructure project that they have vehemently opposed on every possible platform (see here).
This is pure hypocrisy. Whilst lamenting the impact of rising energy prices and transport prices on South Africa's poor, COSATU have in actual fact been capitalising on their misery.
The reports of COSATU's profits also came less than a month after the union released a damning statement slamming the profits made by Kappsch TrafficCOm (KTC), an Austrian company that has made significant profits from its contract to build and operate the e-tolling system in Gauteng.