“Without safe infrastructure and services, it will be difficult for goods and people to move from one place to another, with negative implications on the economy,” he said at the opening of a new taxi rank in Mthatha in the Eastern Cape. The South African government declared October national Transport Month with campaigns focusing on transport infrastructure and road safety.
Earlier this year, President Jacob Zuma highlighted the strategic role of transport as one of the drivers of growth in other sectors of the economy such as tourism, agriculture and mining.
Martins also linked transport to tourism growth, highlighting the fact that domestic and international tourists depended on transport to move about. Also, their choice of destinations was largely influenced by the state of transport.
“Similarly, mining and agricultural goods have to be transported to local and international destinations through the road, rail, maritime and aviation modes of transport,” the minister said.
Significant amounts of resources have been allocated to improve existing transport systems, while at the same time, creating new infrastructure, especially in rural and poor urban areas, he said.
Martins said government’s interventions were also geared towards achieving other national policy goals such as job creation, poverty eradication, skills development, and local economic development.
The refurbishment of the Mthatha Taxi Rank, the airport and the construction of the Mbashe Bridge formed part of many activities being implemented across the country, he added.