The queues outside the labor exchange are formed
this morning in the capital of Ghana. Just standing at the official home of the
government, I can see parliamentarians, ministers and other stake holders
wrapped in coats in their luxurious cars patiently waiting for the red radiance
of the traffic light to make way for the green. To them getting first class
service and living the high life is their fate. Just at the instance my mind
was readdressed to the workers in my town ,Dzodze.
Here they are with no helmet nor gloves but seated
on their motor bikes on the look for passengers to transport. Close to them is
the mouth-watering aroma Akple from the Akple seller. With the fumes from the
bike mingling with that of the aroma they hope to earn Gh 1 as a start to fill
their empty stomach with the auntie kafui’s Akple after a
long fast in the night. They also thought of how much they would be able to
send home their children and their unemployed wives.
Transportation is without gainsaying, very
paramount in the life of the people. In fact, it could be asserted that without
transportation, there would be no or stunted development in the society.
Some years back, the most popular means of
commercial transportation patronized in Dzodze to various destinations were
taxis. Taxis, at the time, plied all the township roads, carrying passengers to
various places of work or business. But with the advent of commercial
motorcyclists, popularly known as keke, in the town, this business was taken
over from the taxi drivers who eventually quit the business in the town to
carry only passengers traveling to surrounding villages.
For some years now, the keke operators have
monopolized the transportation business in the town, recording high turnover
every day. From an observation gathered a commercial motorcyclist gets about gh
20 to gh 30 daily in the business despite their ever-growing number in the town.
Some passengers also prefer the motor bikes because they could take them to
their door-steps.
Dzodze among many other towns located along the
borders or boundaries of Ghana are faced with similar routine daily.
Not so long, activities of motorcycle operators in
Ghana have come under the searchlight of the government owing to passage of
road traffic regulation law.
Since then there have been cries from the
operators about government depriving them of their livelihood. They said it
would lead to a state of unemployment adding that any law that creates
unemployment is a bad law.
Unfortunately it looks clearly their cries would
not be heard even if the ‘people’s man’, Nii Laryea Afotey Agbo ,the
Greater Accra Regional Minister resonates them. According to the greater accra
regional minister, enforcing such a law would produce a dire consequences.
The gravamen of Mr Agbo’s argument is that since
the Okada business was operated mainly by young men, banning the practice which
will effectively take them out of business will frustrate them trigger a surge
in armed robbery and other violent attacks. He wants the youth
trained and given employable skills before enforcing the law.
When I asked kojovi one of the motor operators who
had an inscription on his bike as ‘life is unfair’ what his assertion was on
this issue, he responded with the only crump of hope he had in a world
hopelessness saying ;’mawu megblea etorwodi o’ which means God does not leave
his people.
So now the question I beg to ask is ; what steps
are government taking to get job for all victims of the legislative instrument
2180?- who does the law really hurt and who does it help?
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