KAMPALA: The traffic police have cautioned boda boda riders against using the northern bypass flyovers because they have become death traps.
Farida Nampiima, the traffic police spokesperson, explains that boda boda riders who use the upper part of the northern bypass have increasingly become victims of speeding cars because they don’t have an escape route once cornered by motor vehicles.
Nampiima adds that they have noticed that Bodaboda cornered by speeding vehicles on northern bypass flyovers ended up falling off and they died instantly. Although police have not declared whether they will use force to stop riders from using the northern bypass flyovers, she explains that speaking about it could help riders and passengers on motorcycles know that it is risky for their lives.
“We remind all the Bodaboda riders using the northern bypass to avoid using the upper part of the bypass,” Nampiima said. “Bodaboda riders tend to use that upper part of the bypass.” All those roads lead to the same point. They should use the lower part. It is risky to use the upper part because in the event of a crash, you will turn over and die at once. There is no escape route. So we advise them to use the lower part, not the upper of the northern bypass. ”
Nampiima’s caution comes on the heels of the 2021 road safety and traffic report, which shows motorcyclists were the most killed group of road users, surpassing pedestrians for the first time. At least 1,390 motorcyclists and 512 passengers on motorcycles died in 2021 road crashes. This means five people die in motorcycle crashes every day across the country.
Police data also shows the regions of Kampala metropolitan north and Kampala Metropolitan East, where northern bypass falls, came in second and third positions, respectively, out of 28 policing regions in regard to high numbers of road deaths and injuries.
The data shows KMP North registered 336 deaths in 2021, of which the majority were Boda Boda riders, while 1,124 people were left with serious injuries. The situation is more or less the same in KMP East, where 255 died in Bodaboda crashes while 1,040 survived with gruesome injuries.
Godfrey Mulimi, a Bodaboda rider along the northern bypass, says traffic jams often force them to use the northern bypass flyovers, especially at Bwaise, where vehicles get stuck for hours.
Mulimira explains that when he is coming from Namboole or from Busega, especially in the early morning or evening hours, using the flyover at Bwaise becomes the only option to beat the traffic congestion.
Mahad Kintu, a Bodaboda rider in Namugongo, says he has severally survived being hit by speeding cars on the northern bypass. Kintu explains that he tries as much as possible to avoid riding on the northern bypass unless he gets a passenger going to areas of Busega because it is easier than using other routes.
Motorcyclists, according to traffic police, are often killed on the Entebbe expressway, northern bypass, Mukono-Lugazi stretch, Jinja road junction, Entebbe road junction, and Bwaise-Kawempe-Matugga stretch.