Khanyi Mbau, Tbou Touch and Minnie Dlamini say yes to e-tolls
Khanyi Mbau, Tbou Touch and Minnie Dlamini have teamed up with SANRAL to encourage people to support e-Tolls.
Hundreds of thousands of motorists have refused to pay e-Tolls and major municipalities are in arrears to the tune of millions of rands.
With the implementation of e-Tolls, the Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (Outo) rose rapidly from nothing to a visible brand with more than R12 million for litigation and civil action against e-Tolls.
Khanyi Mbau, Tbou Touch and Minnie Dlamini have shared their thoughts in support of e-Tolls amidst all its opposition in three videos.
Tbo Touch says "yes" to e-tolls
"We enjoy better roads today because someone conceptualised a better South Africa that's gonna work beyond 2020. My compliance was not government forcing me to pay, I had to come to that acceptance that I live in a better South Africa. I live in a Better greater Johannesburg"
Khanyi Mbau encourages you to pay e-tolls
Khanyi Mbau said she hated e-Tolls when it first came out and wanted to stop driving altogether but she had a change of heart when the new system started.
"Now that the system has changed, Ive got a slight change of heart, It makes it easier to pay, I don't have to look for a tag and I don't have to worry about paying big amounts of money just to make money."
Minnie Dlamini is for e-Tolls
Minnie Dlamini says she was just as mad as everyone else when e-Tolls started but she now feels that, "At the end of the day e-Tolls is for a higher quality of life. It's for better roads. It's for efficiency. It's for safety."