Africa’s fastest train has opened its new
route to the capital, Pretoria, from Johannesburg in a bid to speed up travel
between two of South Africa’s major cities. The Gautrain takes less than 30
minutes for the 54km (34 mile) journey. It can take up to two hours to travel
this distance by car during rush hour.
The Gautrain’s inaugural airport route was opened just in time for the
2010 World Cup, when it was used by thousands of football fans. But by reaching
Pretoria, it is likely to be used by ordinary South African commuters to beat
the traffic on one of South Africa’s busiest roads. Tickets for a single trip
between Rosebank and Pretoria cost 46 rand ($6.90; £4.20) - 18 rand more than
the price of a minibus taxi but cheaper than the cost of driving. Hundreds of
commuters turned up at Johannesburg’s Rosebank station as early as 05:30 local
time (0330GMT) for the train’s first trip to Pretoria.
“I arrived here at 0630, the bus dropped me right in front of the
building here. The train ride was brilliant - everything is well organised
[and] on time,” one commuter told Talk Radio 702. Some minor glitches were
reported, including technical issues in one of the carriages but engineers have
since attended to the problems, Gautrain officials said. The government says it
aims to make rail transport the backbone of the public transport system,
according to Transport Minister Sbu Ndebele.
“Transport infrastructure over the next two years is guaranteed to
radically change the way South Africans travel due to a multibillion rand boost
by the government,” Mr Ndebele said, reports the New Age newspaper. The train’s
top speed is 160 km/h (100 mph) - a long way from the world’s fastest trains
but still far superior to the locomotives chugging along most of the rest of
the continent’s tracks, which mostly date from the colonial era.
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