Baltimore Sun

Egypt seeks to end run of motorized rickshaws

- By Isabel Debre and Mohamed Salah

CAIRO — Motorized rickshaws known as tuktuks have ruled the streets of Cairo’s slums for the past two decades, squeezing through dusty alleys, dodging trash bins and fruit stands, blaring rhythmic electro-pop and navigating the city’s chaos to haul millions of Egyptians home every day.

Now the government is taking its most ambitious stand yet again against the polluting three-wheeled vehicles: in a push to modernize the country’s neglected transport system, it plans to replace tuk-tuks with cleanrunni­ng minivans.

“This is for the health and safety of all Egyptians,” said Khaled el- Qassim, the spokesman for Egypt’s Ministry of Local Developmen­t, which is spearheadi­ng the initiative. “We’re creating a more beautiful image of our country.”

The state had long turned a blind eye as tuk-tuks became part of the fabric of life in Cairo’s vast informal settlement­s.

The new plan requires that drivers sell their tuktuks for scrap and take loans to buy new minivans — or risk fines and even prosecutio­n.

It has raised fears that the poorest Egyptians, already squeezed by economic austerity measures, will shoulder the bulk of the burden.

“I’d rather work as a thief than pay for this minivan,” said Ehab Sobhy, a 47-yearold who earns 130 pounds, about $8, a day plying the densely packed district of Shobra in his weathered black-and-yellow tuk-tuk, sporting an Islamic sticker in place of a license.

“If they take this away, how is my family going to eat,” asked Sobhy.

Even with a government loan, he said he wouldn’t be able to afford the 90,000 pounds he estimates he’d need for the new minivan.

“They’ll bring money to the banks, all at the expense of the people,” said Mohammed Zaydan, a 52-year-old father of five who started driving a tuk-tuk after struggling to find work as a painter. “If they ban the tuk-tuk, they trample on the poor.”

Former President Hosni Mubarak’s government tried to stem the tide of tuk-tuks, banning them in most of Cairo’s affluent neighborho­ods, but it also allowed tuk-tuk parts to flow from South Asia to Egypt, where auto manufactur­ers legally assembled and sold the unlicensed vehicles.

It was a classic example of the state’s contradict­ory approach toward the informal economy, which accounts for as much as 50% to 60% of Egypt’s GDP, according to the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on.

“Because of its limited capacities, the state lives with deeply embedded informalit­y,” or do-it-yourself infrastruc­ture, like unauthoriz­ed housing, which saves the government from providing mass services to the poor, said Amr Adly, a Cairo-based political economy expert.

The business exploded, with rickshaws becoming popular with disabled people, the elderly and women who want to avoid harassment at crowded bus stops.

But that could soon change. Now President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi’s government, which has spent the past five years trying to revamp Egypt’s image, is taking aim at the unregulate­d vehicles.

Last year, it passed a law requiring that all new buyers license their tuk-tuks. Ghabbour Group, the country’s largest auto producer, was hard hit, its tuk-tuk sales dropping by 60%.

In September, Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly announced a sweeping plan to phase out tuk-tuks in 20 governorat­es, swapping them for seven-seater gaspowered minivans. The proposal, offering drivers a payoff period of up to five years, bars all tuk-tuks from cities and main roads but allows new and licensed tuk-tuks to continue operating in narrow alleys and rural villages.

Egypt’s finance and military production ministries, along with three auto manufactur­ers, have opened an economic review to hammer out the details, and expect the microbuses to hit the streets within a year.

El-Qassim, the spokesman for the developmen­t ministry, said the tuk-tuks contribute to congestion, air pollution and fatal car crashes — even terrorism, since the government can’t trace unlicensed vehicles.

He described them as a drag on Egypt’s economic productivi­ty, keeping teenagers out of school and depriving the state of revenue from registrati­on fees and taxes.

But skeptics question the logic of changing a tuk-tuk prized for its tiny size, high maneuverab­ility and cheap fare for a microbus that manufactur­ers expect to be four times the size and price.

“It’s a reflection of how the state is more obsessed with appearance­s than investing in the infrastruc­ture of where people actually live,” said Rabab el-Mahdi, a political scientist at the American University in Cairo.

 ?? NARIMAN EL-MOFTY/AP ?? A driver tries to maneuver his tuk-tuk in a narrow alleyway of a slum in Cairo, Egypt.
NARIMAN EL-MOFTY/AP A driver tries to maneuver his tuk-tuk in a narrow alleyway of a slum in Cairo, Egypt.

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