Yellow taxis packed in Khartoum, Sudan. PHOTO | MOHAMED NURELDIN | REUTERS
The yellow taxis of Khartoum were once an enduring part of its colonial legacy.
Introduced in Sudan’s capital under British rule in 1937 and last renewed as a fleet in 1978, the vehicles bear the signs of numerous repairs, their paintwork chipped, and their often-elderly drivers wait in vain for customers.
They say they’ve been left behind by competitors who advertise using unregulated ride hailing apps, and who drive newer cars.
“We’ve raised generations of children off the back of these taxis. But our cabs are old now,” driver Alrasheed Ahmed, who has had his since 1980, told Reuters at one city cab rank with around two dozen vehicles.
“And now these app drivers have appeared, and they just stick on a TAXI sign. That belongs to us and they’re exploiting it,” he added, gesturing towards a row of newer cars across the street.
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The drivers said their struggles mirrored Sudan’s wider economic decline, with their government unable to finance new cars as fuel costs continue to soar.
Some yellow cab customers remain out of loyalty. “There’s no work at all. Some of them come here with a bunch of passengers and could wait until the sun goes down to leave with another. That is why I always ride with them,” said one, Abbas Alamin.
But his gesture is a rare one, and even the ride hailing sector’s future is far from guaranteed, with many Sudanese now choosing to forgo public transport altogether and rely on hitchhiking instead.
Major projects such as the standard gauge railway have been flagged for serious impropriety.
For Tshisekedi, the lack of peace in the east is both an old burden and a new challenge.