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WHAT’S UP!
It is largely accepted that Adolf Hitler was a monster, and the Nazis concept of racial superiority led to some of the worst crimes in human history. The worst of them was, of course, the attempted extermination of the Jewish people, but they also tried to do away with those they took as inferior, including Africans. So, why would someone turn around and claim all this is a hoax and that the Nazis were very good folks?
David Irving was a respectable English historian, for a time. But sometime in the 1980s, he started embracing radical ideology that held that the Nazi death camps, the gas chambers and the Holocaust did not happen.
For his pains, Irving was convicted in Germany and Austria under laws against Holocaust denial and “trivialising” Nazi crimes, jailed in Austria and barred from multiple countries, including Germany, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Other similar deniers have also been punished for trying to rewrite history.
There have been several efforts in the past to evict vendors from Kampala streets, but somehow they have always found their way back.
In fact, some vendors interviewed by the media swore that within two weeks they would be back. We shall just have to wait and see.
Reports have it that next KCCA is set to remove ‘illegal’ taxis and bodaboda stages, in further efforts to de-clutter the city streets. Predictably, the taxi guys are not very happy with this. They claim that the present taxi parks are too small to accommodate all the taxis plying the city streets.
Bodabodas are another matter, but Kampala does not need taxi parks in the city; that is where much of the transport chaos comes from. There was a lot of fanfare when the Natete Taxi Park was opened several years ago, with the promise that there would be no more ‘waiting’ for passengers along the city streets.
Therein is the problem with Uganda’s transport system, where taxis (and the few buses that still ply the streets) wait for up to 30 minutes for passengers to fill it. It should just be a ‘pick and drop’ system, like it happens in other, more efficient cities. It has been calculated that the economy loses billions of shillings every day, with people stuck in taxis waiting to get from one place to another, but doing nothing.
Of course, the best time to implement otherwise unpopular but necessary reforms is just after elections, and KCCA seems to have got its timing right.
Will it work this time? Or will the vendors return after two weeks as they threaten to do? Will the taxis finally shape up, or gleefully go about their chaotic business like they have been doing?
We wait with bated breath.
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