Opinion

Gridlocks caused by breakdown in social order

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating

 

By SUNNY BINDRA
Posted  Saturday, December 17  2011 at  18:38

I have been beating the gridlock tune on my drum on this page since 2003.

Every year, the situation in our capital city gets worse. Every year, leaders yawn and look away. But for how much longer?

As Nairobians of all walks of life can testify, the situation is now at breaking point.

In recent weeks we have had several days on which traffic has been at a complete standstill in pretty much all corners of this once-proud city.

It has taken unfortunate residents five, six or seven hours just to get to their homes. The question that perplexes me most is: where is the leadership? This thing cannot be resolved by the people.

The people, in fact, have fallen into grave civic disorder, breaking every rule in the traffic book at will. But that is where leadership is meant to come in, is it not?

Political leaders, we know that the traffic-standstill problem does not affect you personally. We see that some of you travel in vast convoys and have the traffic cleared from your path.

We observe that most of you feel you are above the law, instructing your drivers to overtake and overlap without the slightest concern for others.

Share This Story
Share

But is that your leadership – that if something doesn’t hurt you personally, you need do nothing about it?

Leadership only matters if it improves the wellbeing of the collective – otherwise it is of no consequence and no meaning. A real leader should look at this situation and feel severe pain in the gut.

Why does it not matter to ministers, permanent secretaries and senior technocrats that the city is becoming unlivable?

How many billions of shillings in GDP are being squandered on the roads every year? After all, all those people are not doing anything while they fidget in a jam – they are waiting to do something. Waiting is not productive.

CEOs: I know you sit in air-conditioned comfort at the back of your limos, typing away on your BlackBerries and iPads. You may be working during gridlock – but what about your employees?

They don’t have that convenience. Their productivity and morale is being hammered every day by time wasted in jams, early starts and late finishes. So why aren’t you using your collective clout to attack this problem?

The thing is this: the jams are neither inevitable nor insurmountable. This problem can be solved. It is within our reach. There is an obvious thing that can be done, literally overnight.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by michael1990

    Spot on, Sunny! Keep it up, mate!

    Posted  December 18, 2011 10:50 AM  
  2. Submitted by olegaita66

    What our damn policy makers do not realize is that traffic jams cost the economy billions of shillings and pollution that causes respiratory diseases and cancer.Ignoring the situation is extremely negligent.Just as Bindra is saying social order need to be fixed,if not then there is no amount of superhighways than can fix traffic problem.Matatus driving on pavements is sheer madness and unacceptable.To curb traffic jams can be turned into revenue generation to the city by installing synchronous traffic lights with cameras that generate traffic fines upon a flash on the license plate.

    Posted  December 18, 2011 04:02 AM