Asia’s tuk-tuks providing a wheel boost to Africa
Auto-rickshaws now becoming a common sight in Africa’s major cities

A regular feature on the chaotic streets of Mumbai, Jakarta and Bangkok, Asia’s three-wheeled “tuk-tuk” has now come to Africa – and with a two-fold bonus: providing much-needed jobs and reducing accidents.
Cheap to run and safer than the traditional motorcycle taxi, the auto-rickshaw is an increasingly common sight trundling along the traffic-choked streets of the continent’s sprawling capitals.
Known in Tanzania and Ethiopia as “bajaj”, in Egypt as “toktok”, in Nigeria as “keke-marwa” and in Sudan as “raksha”, the tuk-tuk has now hit Liberia, where delighted locals have christened their own version the “kekeh”.
Motorcycle taxis, known locally as “two-tires”, were the go-to means of public transport in Liberia’s capital Monrovia until lawmakers outlawed them in 2013 amid concerns over reckless riding and the high toll of accidents.
READ MORE: Amsterdam tuk-tuk taxi maker aims to make inroads in United States
The ban paved the way for the kekeh, imported from India and China by numerous operators, mostly Nigerian and Guinean, who then employ young Liberians.