Philippines to phase out its beloved jeepneys

Passengers board Jeepneys at a terminal in Manila. Picture: Asron Favila / AP

Passengers board Jeepneys at a terminal in Manila. Picture: Asron Favila / AP

Published Jan 30, 2018

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Manila, the Philippines - Jeepneys, the flamboyant

passenger trucks of the Philippines, are nearing the end of

their reign as the 'Kings of the Road', but they're not going

down without a fight.

Government moves to overhaul outdated public transport,

making it safer and more environmentally friendly, will put the

brakes on a mode of travel that has long been the surest and

cheapest option in a country of 105 million people.

But the operators and drivers of the 200 000 jeepneys that

have plied the nation's roads and highways for decades are

defiant, denouncing moves to oust them as "anti-poor" and a

threat to their livelihoods.

"It is a big hassle to us poor people since we are the ones

suffering," said one jeepney driver, upset after traffic police

pulled him over because his vehicle was belching black smoke.

Affordable

Jeepneys evolved from surplus army jeeps left behind by

the US military after the Second World War to become brightly-painted

vehicles festooned with religious slogans, horoscope signs or

family names.

At a cost of eight pesos (R1.90) for a journey of four kilometres in Manila, the capital, they are easily affordable, but

the ride is far from comfortable.

A typical jeepney packs in 10 to 16 commuters, sitting

knee-to-knee on twin benches, and lacks air-conditioning or

windows to shield occupants from the heat, rain and choking

fumes. In Metro Manila, one of Asia's most gridlocked mega-cities,

passengers can sit there for hours.

There are no seatbelts and commuters have only ceiling bars

to keep from being thrown off their seats as drivers race to

beat traffic lights or edge out competitors for waiting

passengers.

A passenger jeepney with a painting of Jesus Christ travels along a road in Manila. Picture: Aaron Favila / AP

The government wants to force unsound and shabby jeepneys

off the streets in favour of bigger, cleaner, safer and more

modern replacements, some electric, others using cleaner fuel.

But drivers complain that the newer units, priced around 1.8

million pesos (R420 000), are prohibitively expensive, and

government subsidies are paltry. Some fear vested interests are at play.

George San Mateo, head of transport group Piston, led a protest last week outside the transport regulator's office.

"They only want to kick out the operators so they could let

corporations take over," he said. "The government is using this crackdown on dilapidated and

smoke-belching jeepneys to force poor operators to buy new ones

they cannot afford."

Regulators have said the plan, backed by president Rodrigo

Duterte, aims simply to modernise public transport. Martin Delgra, chairman of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board said: There are a lot of public utility jeepneys that are old and

dirty, so we have to address it; we cannot compromise safety when it comes to

roadworthiness."

Reuters

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