Gulf Times

‘King of the road’ rules again as lockdown eased

- Reuters

Thousands of jeepneys, flamboyant­ly decorated jeeps that serve as cheap public transport across the Philippine­s, were back on the streets of Manila yesterday, bringing relief to companies and commuters who have struggled with coronaviru­s curbs.

Dubbed “the king of the road”, an estimated 55,000 of these large, multi-coloured trucks, used to crawl through Manila’s gridlocked roads on a typical day before being forced to a halt 15 weeks ago when the government imposed a coronaviru­s lockdown.

Just 6,000 were back in business yesterday, operating at half capacity under strict social distancing rules.

In pre-pandemic times, jeepneys routinely carried up to 15 passengers who sat knee-toknee on twin benches in the windowless vehicles, choked by exhaust fumes.

“I’m very happy we are now back on the road. This is our only source of income,” said driver Celo Cabangon, whose truck is decorated with Japanese and Philippine flags, religious verses and the logo of US sci-fi film Transforme­rs. Under the new rules, passengers must also undergo temperatur­e checks before boarding and shield themselves from one another with face masks and plastic sheets. The Philippine­s has recorded 40,000 coronaviru­s cases, and 1,280 deaths.

Commuter Alejandra Carable welcomed the jeepney’s return.”Our expenses are too much without jeepneys. We can save much more now that the jeepneys are back.”

A jeepney fare is typically about 9 pesos ($0.18), cheaper than trains, taxis or motorised tricycles, which were allowed back on the road a month ago when authoritie­s started easing one of the world’s longest and strictest lockdowns.

A phased return to work has been chaotic without jeepneys, with commuters stranded and some companies unable to provide sufficient private transport.

The first jeepneys were surplus army jeeps left behind by the US military after World War Two. Most are festooned with religious slogans or horoscope signs and are in poor shape.

 ??  ?? Passengers wearing masks for protection against Covid-19 are seated in between plastic barriers to maintain social distancing in a jeepney, in Quezon City, Metro Manila, yesterday. Passengers wearing masks for protection against the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) wait for a jeepney, in Quezon City.
Passengers wearing masks for protection against Covid-19 are seated in between plastic barriers to maintain social distancing in a jeepney, in Quezon City, Metro Manila, yesterday. Passengers wearing masks for protection against the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) wait for a jeepney, in Quezon City.
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