36.5 C
Sierra Leone
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Okada Riders Flout Law Governing CBD

HomeAYV NewsOkada Riders Flout Law Governing CBD

Okada Riders Flout Law Governing CBD

Date:

Related stories

Health Minister launches first Climate Health Unit

Sierra Leone’s Minister of Health and Sanitation, Austin Demby...

EU funds Kambia district with $2.5M investment activities

The ceremony was witnessed by the Minister of Local...

60% of Kush supply chain disrupted nationwide

Talking to the audience during a discussion with the...

First Lady champions fight against Early Child Marriage

The Office of the First Lady of Sierra Leone...

AYV Miss University 2023/24: Meet The Contestants

April, 2024, these Queens will be contesting to win...

He described the action of the riders as ‘willful’, adding that if they are allowed to continue plying the CBD, it would be difficult to stop them in future.

Another concerned citizen, Hannah Liverpool, said that the action taken by the then Minister of Internal Affairs was appropriate and timely because it restored sanity to Freetown and prevented accidents, especially in the Freetown CBD.

“That is why continuity in governance is very important. President Koroma’s government left behind some good policies that just need to be enforced by Pres. Maada Bio’s government and therefore the ban on commercial bike riders plying the CBD must be enforced,” Miss Liverpool said.

It could be recalled that on Wednesday, April 13, 2016 the Sierra Leone Police, presented a paper and a video clip on the “lawlessness of bike riders in the city” to a Parliamentary Oversight Committee on Internal Affairs, and called on the government to “ban commercial bike (okada) riders in the city, especially in the central business district (CBD) of Freetown.”

In his statement to the Oversight Committee, Director of Traffic, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Patrick Johnson, said commercial bike riders were a regrettable sight in the city as they are a nuisance because of their involvement in accidents, noting that the riders over-speed and have no respect for traffic rules as they ‘exhibit lawlessness’.

In May 2016, after a meeting with relevant stakeholders, including the Commercial Bike Riders Union, Sierra Leone Police, Sierra Leone Road Safety Authority (SLRSA), Motor Drivers Union and the Freetown City Council, then Minister of Internal Affairs, Retired Major Alfred Palo Conteh enforced the Central Business District (CBD) regulation against all Commercial Bike (Okada) Riders, banning them within the CBD areas.

They have however returned to the CBD. This is evident each day.

Latest stories

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Previous article
Next article