Lates News from Congo-Brazzaville
Browsing: road safety
A taxi crash near Augustin Poignet high school in Sibiti killed four people, including the driver, minutes after the last BEPC exam ended on June 26.
Brazzaville moto-taxi owners and riders learn the new Decree 2024-324: jobs reserved for adult Congolese, one passenger only, and a 50 km/h speed cap.
Nathan Services begins biometric enrolment for driving permits and vehicle papers in Kintélé, launching a three-month pilot to modernise road documents.
In Oyo, northern Congo-Brazzaville, Wewa motorbike taxis power daily mobility, create youth jobs and reach cut-off districts, even as road safety concerns grow.
A Spike in Two-Wheel Crashes Over the past year, emergency doctors at Brazzaville University Hospital say motorbike crashes arrive almost hourly, many involving moto-taxis weaving through…
Motorcycle Safety Push in Congo-Brazzaville The clatter of motorcycle engines, once simply part of Brazzaville’s soundtrack, has turned into a national safety concern. From dusty backstreets…
Mobile speed radars debut in Congo A new chapter in Congo’s road safety policy opened in Brazzaville as forty gendarmes, police officers and civil-service supervisors spent…
Mobile radar trial draws attention on N1 Traffic slowed to a curious crawl near Igné as uniformed officers placed sleek grey boxes on tripods along National…
Flash of Change on Congo’s Roads From this week, motorists driving between Moungali and Poto-Poto in Brazzaville may meet an unfamiliar flash. The transport ministry has…
Shock on Pool Highway A routine inter-urban trip turned tragic early on Sunday near Ngamandzambala, Pool department. A Stelimac coach heading from Brazzaville to Pointe-Noire left…