The jewel in the crown of Samizdata.net
A blog for people with a critically rational individualist perspective. We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR
[Russ.,= self-publishing house]
There is much to find for those who look
We are not alone
Made possible by...
 
September 05, 2006
Tuesday
 
 
Road trip
Alex Singleton (London)  African affairs

On Saturday I got into a 4x4 and took part in a 460km road trip around rural Kenya. One of the most notable things in the journey were the frequent police roadblocks, each consisting of two rather sinister looking yellow metal strips on the road with spikes pointing upwards. These were accompanied by at least a couple of police officers.

Government sources tell me that they are essential in the fight against crime. On the other hand, ordinary citizens are rather more cynical, saying that criminals can bribe their way through them and that they are just a way of fleecing drivers who are made to pay fees. 99% of the time no receipt is given.

We were luckly. Apparently the police don't like to try it on with 4x4s containing someone who is white and might be World Bank or a journalist. But for ordinary Kenyan drivers, the roadblocks are a menace, delaying journeys and breeding petty corruption.

(My visit to Kenya is being blogged here.)

Comments

Call me old fashioned, but I refuse to take trips to countries that need to have frequent police roadblocks to combat crime.


Posted by Jake at September 5, 2006 03:50 PM
Call me old fashioned, but I refuse to take trips to countries that need to have frequent police roadblocks to combat crime

Avoid the UK then, because the only difference is that they do it via CCTV and the shakedown comes in the post a few days later.


Posted by Perry de Havilland at September 5, 2006 04:51 PM

Sounds like the Kenyans have been sending exchange students to the Mexican Police Academy...


Posted by Mike Lorrey at September 5, 2006 05:35 PM

LOL! How perceptive is Mike Lorrey!?

Here in north-eastern Mexico, the traffice cops of certain localities are notorious for 'putting the bite' on motorists for the slightest infraction, real or imagined.

They usually back down when a white-boy starts shouting at them in good street-Spanish and realise the effort isn't worth it.


Posted by Eddie Willers at September 5, 2006 07:28 PM

Avoid the UK then, because the only difference is that they do it via CCTV and the shakedown comes in the post a few days later.
oh, the horror -- speed cameras encroaching on your personal liberty!


Posted by tebbit at September 5, 2006 10:10 PM

The myth of public service---government as some sort of selfless committment to the public good.

Government has been, and continues to be, a business enterprise. From the little corner roadblock to the impressive office in the newly remodeled palace where the money changes hands in suitcases, or little envelopes with secret bank account numbers, in exchange for the mineral lease or required permit, government is an enterprise devoted to the provision of a living for its members.

Until that simple fact can be drilled into the heads of the average member of society, and they can begin to see the enormity of the scam, there will be no progress made in dismantling these cancerous Ponzi schemes, and relieving the average working citizen from the theft of untold billions diverted from productive, creative work, and wasted on graft and meaningless political balderdash such as the "bridge to nowhere".

It is the task of any person who has realized the scale, and malevolence, of this ongoing criminal enterprise to get his hands dirty by challenging, in every venue possible, any continuation or expansion of this con game. And dirty, as well as dangerous, is exactly what this job is, but it may be the most crucial work that needs to be done.

All other developments will be wasted, or perverted to an inimical use, if this cancerous growth is not excised.


Posted by veryretired at September 5, 2006 11:31 PM

veryretired,
I'd rather have the roadblocks of Kenya wich shake you for a couple of bucks, than the prevailing regulation and taxation of the West.


Posted by Jacob at September 5, 2006 11:37 PM

Two graduates of a 1970s era international development course for government bureaucrats at a trendy Western institute keep in touch after graduating. One is African the other Asian. Twenty years later the African goes to visit the Asian at his large house in the suburbs of a booming city. The African congratulates him on how well he has done. After a few whiskies out on his terrace he confesses the source of his wealth. "You see that highway overpass," he confides rubbing his fingers together in the international sign for money, "5% for me."

The following year the Asian visits the African. He lives in a palatial residence standing far higher than anything else in the flyblown wasteland. His house teems with a multitude of servants. The Asian enquires how he has been able to amass such an obvious fortune. "You see that new highway over there?"
"Well, no." replies the Asian.
"Exactly, 100% for me!"

Corruption is the biggest reason for Africa's economic mess and therefore one of the most deadly forces for evil in the world.


Posted by ResidentAlien at September 6, 2006 03:00 AM

A couple of cops in the middle of nowhere? Seems to me some sniping from the bush should raise the transaction costs, maybe keep the guys in the station unless they're called out. You know, criminals in the woods and all that. Know what I mean, eh?


Posted by Paul from Florida at September 6, 2006 03:27 AM

when I was in Zambia last year I drove through several police checks. When they saw I was a white man with a white wife in a car we were just waved through. They are looking for illegal immigrants, stolen goods, in Zambia this would be copper cathodes. No problems for me, I like to see police in action.


Posted by tranio at September 6, 2006 05:34 AM
Post a comment









Remember personal info?


Enter anti-spambot Turing code:





Select some text and click this to format it as a quote Make the selected text bold Make the selected text italic Add a web link


Basic html active.

Alas, but for obscure reasons Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not harness to power of the push-button formatting options and shall therefore compose basic html with their bare hands. Yet Mozilla, Mac and Linux users shall not fear, for we shall reveal forthwith the mysteries of Basic Html:

<strong>This text in-between is bold</strong>

<em>This text is in italics</em>

And
<blockquote>This is a quote</blockquote>
Remember to close your opened tags as such: <tag> tagged text and closing </tag> and we promise you will get out of here alive.

For adding links, either use the link URL button on the toolbar or enter your code by hand in the following format:
<a href="http://www.your_link.com">your link text or description here</a>

Movable Type's anti-spambot e-mail address protection is enabled.

You are a guest on private property. Have fun but please be civil and succinct. Blogroaches will be persecuted, not to mention IP banned.

Long third party quotes or articles will also be deleted... so just link to articles you think are germane to your comment, don't quote the whole bloody thing.