VIDEO – MAN DIES IN A MATATU

The body of an unidentified passenger was left abandoned for several hours on the side of the busy Mombasa Road on Tuesday Morning, November 24. This was after the said passenger died aboard a 14-seater matatu plying the route, in what is suspected to be Covid-19 case.

As early as 7 am, photos of the matatu passengers and crew standing desolate several metres away from the vehicle. Footage has since emerged showing police officials and health workers donning PPEs in the area. A knapsack sprayer can also be seen next to the matatu following a decontamination exercise.

The body was covered in a white cloth and placed on the side of the road as authorities directed traffic away from the scene in a bid to minimise any potential exposure. It is not yet clear how many passengers were aboard the matatu when the passenger collapsed and died.

In July 2020, it was announced that Public Service Vehicles (PSVs) would require authorisation from the National Transport Safety Authority (NTSA), Ministry of Health and Interior in order to operate.

According to the NTSA website, the operators have to obtain a public service transport clearance form duly filled by the three departments before getting authorisation to operate. 

The PSV operators are required to resubmit the application for operating which will be validated every 30 days failure to which their clearance would be revoked.  The Ministry of Health explained that the regulations were designed to stop the spread of the Covid-19 through public transport.

Some of the requirements stipulated included the requirement to have hand sanitizers as well as reduced seat capacity to ensure social distancing among passengers.  However, in October 2020, matatu operators threatened to ground their vehicles if the government did not lift Covid-19 restrictions on a limited number of passengers.

“Either we carry full capacity or we take all our vehicles to the police station by next week. The Corona that’s in matatus is the same in planes and trains and we are telling the government not to underestimate us,” said Jamal Ibrahim of the Matatu Owners Association.

Government Spokesperson Col (Rtd) Cyrus Oguna on Wednesday, November 11, warned Kenyans, asking them to avoid boarding PSVs that violate the set Covid-19 safety protocols.

He urged Kenyans to avoid matatus that don’t observe social distancing, adding that if one contracts the virus they are on their own and the government cannot protect them.

Sourced from Kenyans.co.ke and Standard Digital

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