Gov’t suspends EPS for one month, motorists call off strike

A traffic officer guides motorists in Kampala
What you need to know:
- Car dealers who sell vehicles on hire purchase were victimised by the law after the police sent fines to them since they were registered owners of vehicles found speeding.
The government has suspended the automated Express Penalty Scheme (Auto EPS) for one month to engage all concerned groups and resolve the bottlenecks in its implementation.
In a statement issued on Thursday, Gen Katumba Wamala, the Works and Transport minister, said they would use the window to address the concerns raised by motorists.
“In this time, the government will verify any concerns regarding fines that were issued on the system, review the regulation and sensitise the public on the regulations and the Auto EPS. The Ministry will also continue to engage stakeholders to address their concerns with the system,” Gen Katumba said.
The implementation of the Auto EPS that commenced two weeks ago saw several motorists slapped with fines as high as 20 per cent of the value of their vehicles due to speeding.
Transporters complained they would run out of business if the law continued to be enforced the way it was designed. They also threatened to strike, prompting Gen Katumba to suspend the implementation.
But the motorists have since suspended their planned strike next week after the Works and Transport ministry suspended the enforcement. The associations that unite taxi operators, car dealerships and truckers had planned the strikes starting on Monday, protesting what they described as exorbitant traffic fines.
Mr Rashid Ssekindi, the chairperson of the taxi operators, said their interest in a strike was for the government to halt the fines until they had agreed on closing the gaps in the law.
“We wrote to the Ministry of Works and Transport to halt the implementation of the fines, or we would go on strike. The government has done what we wanted, and we are now asking them to involve us in improving the law,” Mr Ssekindi said yesterday.
Car dealers who sell vehicles on hire purchase were victimised by the law after the police sent fines to them since they were registered owners of vehicles found speeding.
Most of the vehicles sold on hire purchase are kept in the names of car dealers until the clients make full payments.
The car dealers said they would join the strike following the Uganda Revenue Authority freezing their accounts until the traffic fines are paid. Some of the car dealers told this newspaper yesterday that they would halt the strike, but would first meet to confirm the suspension.
Mr William Busuulwa, a leader of the truck operators, said his members agreed to suspend the strike and engage the government in the best way to enforce discipline on the roads.
“Truckers from the region, who transport cargo to and through Uganda, had resolved to park their vehicles in protest against the speed limits and traffic fines. They have agreed to suspend the strike and are waiting to be invited by the Ugandan government for an engagement,” Mr Busuulwa said.
President Museveni on Thursday warned that the digital number plates should only be used for its intended security purposes and not collection of fines.
“Finally, I saw some issues about the digital number plates, and fines. That people are being fined. But the issue about the number plates is not about fines, it is anti-crime. I cannot accept our Ugandans dying because of incomplete infrastructure. The cameras have helped us handle a number of things. These digitised number plates have a central command force, you touch it and an alarm goes off, that's their work, not collecting fines and so on,” President Museveni said during the reading of the budget at Independence Grounds, Kololo in Kampala City.