Sometimes hero doesn’t wear uniform.
Sometimes hero is passenger. Tired. Sweating. Sitting in bus where people, chickens, ducks are fighting for air.
Her name: Emily Achom.
Her weapon: Phone.
Her enemy: Recklessness on our roads.
Today she boarded YY bus UAZ 701X from Arua to Kampala. By Nebbi, bus was no longer bus. It was market. Crew kept adding people in corridors. Others climbed with chickens. Ducks. Bags. Air finished.
You know that feeling? When conductor says “pangisa, pita mbele” but mbele is full? When you can’t turn neck? When child next to you is crying because heat?
Most of us keep quiet. We abuse in heart. We say “God help us reach”.
Emily did different.
She took phone. Dialed Police Traffic Emergency 0800199099.
By Pakwach Bridge, traffic officers were waiting. Bus impounded. Driver given EPS ticket for excess passengers. Extra people removed. Chickens, ducks — out.
Yes, journey delayed.
She remembered the saying, better late than late.
Why Emily’s Call Matters For Every Ugandan
First, we normalized madness.
Bus for 67 passengers carrying 100. Plus goats. Plus sacks of cassava. We laugh. “Uganda ni Uganda.”
Until it overturns in corner. Then we cry. Then we say “government where?”
Emily reminded us: Government is you.
Second, crew don’t fear police. They fear you reporting.
These drivers bribe at weighbridges. But they can’t bribe 40 passengers with phones.
If 5 people in that bus called 0800199099, that bus wouldn’t even leave Nebbi.
Third, “losing time” is better than “losing life”.
Emily said it clear: “Yes, we have lost some time on the journey, but it is far better to arrive late than to risk lives.”
How many times we rush? How many burials we attend because driver said “I want to make two trips”?
The Rot Emily Exposed
This is not just YY bus. This is system.
Greed of crews: One more passenger = 20k. They don’t see human. They see 20k.
Silence of passengers: We fear to talk. “They will beat me.” “They will leave me in bush.” So we die quiet.
Weak enforcement: Buses leave Arua full. Where are traffic checks between Arua and Nebbi? Why wait till Pakwach?
Emily’s call fixed one bus. But how many UAZ, UBL, UAM buses passed same road today with same sin?
What Ordinary Ugandan Can Learn From Emily
First, save 0800199099 now. Traffic Emergency Toll Free. It works. Emily proved.
Don’t save only “babe” and “mummy”. Save number that saves life.
Second, speak up in bus. Don’t abuse. Be firm. “Driver, this is too much. I’m calling police.”
When one person talks, others get courage.
Third, refuse to board if full. I know it’s hard. Next bus is 3 hours. But next life is zero.
Tell conductor “I pay full fare, I want full seat. Not half butt.”
Fourth, bus companies must list complaints number inside bus. Big. Near driver.
If they fear nothing, let them fear passengers with evidence.
What Elite Uganda Must Do
Ordinary person like Emily can call. But big people must act.
Ministry of Works: Impound 10 buses in one week, whole industry will line up.
Bus owners: Your driver kills 20 people, your license should die too. Why is bus back on road next day?
MPs: Stop debating your allowances. Debate why Nebbi-Pakwach is “slaughter corridor”. Put cameras. Put permanent checks.
Emily did citizen arrest with phone. Now do law arrest with policy.
Last Word: Road Safety Is Not Government’s Baby Alone
We blame police. We blame UNRA. We blame Museveni.
But who boards overloaded bus? Us.
Who keeps quiet? Us.
Who says “let me reach first”? Us.
Emily Achom showed us mirror.
You can be tired. You can be late. But you can’t be dead.
So next time you’re in taxi with 5 people in front seat.
Next time you’re in bus with chickens on your lap.
Next time boda says “we are three, we fit”.
Remember Pakwach Bridge.
Remember Emily.
Pick phone. Dial 0800199099.
Because, “valuing life over recklessness” starts with you.
Credit to Emily.
Now credit to you — if you act.
That’s all
