Traffic officers steal money from motorcycle taxi drivers across Kampala every single day. Police take keys away from riders and demand cash payments before returning motorcycles. Officers ignore proper legal procedures and create fear among working people trying to earn money. Drivers pay between 30,000 and 100,000 shillings just to keep working each day. The system forces poor people to choose between feeding families or losing their jobs.
Motorcycle taxi drivers carry millions of people around Uganda's capital city during traffic jams. Most riders cannot afford proper licenses or safety equipment required under traffic laws. Police use these violations as reasons to demand bribes instead of issuing official tickets. Officers make more money from street corruption than from their regular government salaries. Some police collect over 200,000 shillings daily through illegal payments from drivers.
Survey results show 70 percent of Ugandans believe police represent the most corrupt government institution. Traffic division officers rank as the worst among all police departments for taking bribes. Citizens report seeing officers break the same traffic rules they enforce against motorcycle drivers. The double standard destroys public trust and makes fair enforcement impossible across the country.
Riders want clear checkpoints and proper receipts for any fines they must pay legally. They ask for affordable licensing programs and anonymous complaint systems to report corrupt officers. Community meetings between police and driver associations could help solve problems peacefully. Fair treatment matters more than special favors for motorcycle taxi operators throughout Uganda.
Motorcycle taxi drivers carry millions of people around Uganda's capital city during traffic jams. Most riders cannot afford proper licenses or safety equipment required under traffic laws. Police use these violations as reasons to demand bribes instead of issuing official tickets. Officers make more money from street corruption than from their regular government salaries. Some police collect over 200,000 shillings daily through illegal payments from drivers.
Survey results show 70 percent of Ugandans believe police represent the most corrupt government institution. Traffic division officers rank as the worst among all police departments for taking bribes. Citizens report seeing officers break the same traffic rules they enforce against motorcycle drivers. The double standard destroys public trust and makes fair enforcement impossible across the country.
Riders want clear checkpoints and proper receipts for any fines they must pay legally. They ask for affordable licensing programs and anonymous complaint systems to report corrupt officers. Community meetings between police and driver associations could help solve problems peacefully. Fair treatment matters more than special favors for motorcycle taxi operators throughout Uganda.