The City of Cape Town's mayoral committee member for safety and security, JP Smith accompanied the rail enforcement unit (REU) officers during a patrol of trains and railway stations in Cape Town on Friday morning.
The unit was launched in recent weeks in to assist the existing security services with the challenges that the Metrorail service faced, which include attacks on the rail infrastructure and assets, the sabotage of the urban rail network, as well as the safety of commuters and rail employees.
Cape Town City's mayoral committee member for safety and security JP Smith at a Cape Town station during the rail enforcement unit (REU) officers patrol on Friday. PHOTO: Supplied.
The City said the formation of the unit follows a memorandum of agreement it signed in May with the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) and the Western Cape government in which the three stakeholders committed to jointly fund the R47,9 million needed to establish and operate the unit for a period of 12 months.
“Passengers say they feel much safer with REU on trains. We will be engaging Prasa via MEC Donald Grant in the next week or two to explore the expansion of the initiative beyond pilot programme to ensure permanent deployment of officers on every train set and squads to patrol infrastructure,” Smith said.
During the patrol, Smith said he also noticed that many passengers did not have valid train tickets.
“On the carriage, I am on, one out of 18 passengers have a ticket at the moment. Next carriage has zero tickets out of 42 passengers,” he said.
Valid trail ticket found on the train. PHOTO: Supplied.
Last month, activist group Unite Behind organised a big protest outside the Cape Town train station, calling for the swift recovery of troubled rail services and prioritising of passenger safety and security.
African News Agency (ANA)