Boda-boda

On the way to the village

Boda-boda (or bodaboda) is a two-wheeled bicycle or motorcycle taxi, originally in East Africa (from English border-border). The operator can also be called boda-boda. In Uganda it is often abbreviated as simply Boda.

Origin

The boda-boda taxis are part of the African bicycle culture; they started in the 1960s and 1970s and are still spreading from their origin on the Kenyan - Ugandan border to other regions. The name originated from a need to transport people across the "no-mans-land" between the border posts without the paperwork involved with using motor vehicles crossing the international border. This started in the southern border crossing town of Busia (Kenya/Uganda), where there is over half a mile between the gates, and quickly spread to the northern border town of Malaba (Kenya). The bicycle owners would shout out boda-boda (border-to-border) to potential customers - not to be confused with poda-poda, which is a form of shared taxi in Sierra Leone.

Typical seating arrangement

Bicycles in use and type of work

Indian or Chinese standard roadster bicycles are used with locally made carriers and a cushion to transport passengers and goods. There are big advantages compared to the expensive, slow and heavy cycle rickshaw used in Asia.

In many East African and Central African cities and villages, professional bodaboda taxi-drivers are common. Bodaboda organizations have been founded in many towns. They help to minimize the risks (dangerous driving, badly maintained bikes) by registering and licensing their members.

Motorbikes replacing bicycles

Motorcycle boda-boda in Uganda
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moped boda-boda.

While the boda-boda bicycle is still spreading to other areas, in its area of origin, especially in cities in Kenya and Uganda, the bicycles are more and more replaced by motorbikes. The motorbike-taxis have taken the name bodaboda as well. Other local names have been coined for the motorbikes; they are known as peng' in the Nyanza province of Kenya. In 2004 it was estimated that more than 200,000 people in Uganda were working as bicycle bodaboda and already almost 90,000 as motorbike bodaboda. In 2016, however, almost all bodabodas in Kampala are motorbikes.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.