Saturday, May 9, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Insight Post Uganda
  • Home
  • NewsHot
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Religion
    • Lifestyle
    • World News
    • Tourism
    • Environment
    • Agriculture
  • Business
    Global Companies Making Billions from the Iran War

    Global Companies Making Billions from the Iran War

    Goma Division Chairperson Hussein Ddumba Kato poses for a photo with one of the newly acquired motorcycles during the handover ceremony at the sacco offices in Mukono Municipality.

    Government Injects UGX100m into Mukono Bodaboda Sacco to Fight Poverty

    URA officials and customs officers inspecting containers at a busy port as importers’ documents lie ready for clearance, highlighting the official cargo verification process amid growing concerns over illegal charges in the logistics chain.

    Logistics Firms Accused of Using URA Name to Extort Traders

  • Sports
    Arsenal Reach First Champions League Final in 20 Years

    Arsenal Reach First Champions League Final in 20 Years

    Sir Alex Ferguson managed Manchester United from 1986 to 2013.

    Sir Alex Ferguson Taken to Hospital as Precaution Before Manchester United vs Liverpool Match

    Kyaggwe County Chief (Ssekiboobo), Vicent Matovu Bintubizibu with new New Technical Team

    Masaza Cup: Kyaggwe Targets Historic Breakthrough After Coaching Shake-Up

  • Education
    Government Review of University Sponsorship Scheme Wins Public Support

    Government Review of University Sponsorship Scheme Wins Public Support

    DEO Rashid Kikomeko and Hajj Ahmed Kakande

    Education Officer, Founding Member Clash Over Secondary School Governance Structure

  • In Luganda
    Betty Nambooze, Mukono Municipality MP

    Kibuule Akubye Mu Nambooze Ebituli, Talina Kyakoledde BannaMukono Okujjako Okujoboja

    Omubaka Gwetwalonda Teyadda-Abekyampisi Betondedde Kibuule

    Omubaka Gwetwalonda Teyadda-Abekyampisi Betondedde Kibuule

    Counsel George Musisi ng'alaga emu ku kaadi mu lukungana lw'amawulire

    Munnamateeka Wa NUP Atambula Nju Ku Nju Ng’ Asaggula Obuwagizi  

  • In Photos
    Ronald Kibuule at Mukono recently.

    Kibuule Poised for Return as Museveni Signals Endorsement in Mukono North

    Katikiro presiding over the opening of the renovated official residence of the Buddu County Chief at Ssaza grounds in Masaka City on Tuesday. Pictures by Robert Nsubuga.

    Pictorial:  Katikiro Mayiga Slams Masaka People Over Poor Hygiene

    Ismael-Kifudde-the-Mukono-Police-Division-Officer-in-Charge-directing-Nambooze-not-to-use-the-route-heading-to-town-center

    Moments of Excessive Force Against Betty Nambooze in Recent General Elections

  • Profiles
    Brig. Gen. Kiyengo (center) posing for the photo with the members of Nakifuma Rotary Club who promised to attend his book launch.

    CUTTING THROUGH HELL: UPDF Medic Chronicles Uganda’s Silent War in Somalia Through Powerful Memoir

    L-R MP Mawogola South (Sembabule)-Goreth Namugga, Councillor Amiri Kiggundu, COTFONE Coordinator-Kayinga Yisito Muddu and Mr Xavier Ejoyi, Country Director ActionAid International Uganda at the award event

    National Citizens’ Integrity Awards 2024: Unsung Heroes Celebrated

    Shaping Perceptions: Patricia Namiwanda, a Blind Advocate Of Change

    Shaping Perceptions: Patricia Namiwanda, a Blind Advocate Of Change

  • Op-Ed
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Insight Post Uganda
Home Opinion

Why Mukono’s Trade Order Is a Necessary Step for Progress

Insight Post Uganda by Insight Post Uganda
April 18, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Why Mukono’s Trade Order Is a Necessary Step for Progress

Mukono Municipality’s enforcement of a trade order to clear road reserves has stirred predictable debate, but beneath the public outcry lies a decision that reflects maturity in urban governance.

For a fast-growing municipality sitting along one of Uganda’s busiest corridors, the Kampala–Jinja highway axis, the choice to restore order is not merely administrative. It is strategic, necessary, and, in many ways, overdue.

Related posts

Man selling pineapples.

Uganda’s Jobs Crisis Is No Longer About Numbers, It Is About Survival

April 17, 2026
Authorities carry out an early morning demolition of roadside kiosks in Kikooza, Mukono Municipality, as part of an enforcement operation to clear illegal structures from road reserves.

When Order Comes at a Cost: The Hidden Price of Clearing Uganda’s Streets

April 2, 2026

For years, Mukono has evolved from a once tranquil town into a bustling urban centre. Population growth increased commercial activity, and its proximity to Kampala have made it a magnet for traders, commuters, and investors.

However, this growth has not always been matched with structured planning. Road reserves, originally set aside for pedestrian movement, drainage systems, and future road expansion, have gradually been taken over by informal traders, makeshift stalls, and, in some cases, semi-permanent structures.

The consequences of this encroachment have been visible to anyone who regularly navigates Mukono town. At peak hours, traffic congestion becomes the defining feature of daily life.

Vehicles crawl through narrow passages where roads have effectively been reduced in width. Pedestrians, deprived of walkways, spill onto the roads, competing for space with boda bodas and cars.

The result is a chaotic mix that slows movement, increases the risk of accidents, and erodes the efficiency of the town’s economy.

It is within this context that the trade order must be understood. Clearing road reserves is not an attack on small businesses; it is an attempt to restore the intended function of public infrastructure. Roads are not markets, and when they become so, the entire urban system begins to fail.

Traffic data and urban patterns across similar municipalities offer a clear picture of what is at stake. When road reserves are encroached upon, the effective capacity of a road can drop by as much as 30 to 50 percent. In practical terms, this means a road designed to handle a certain volume of traffic is suddenly overwhelmed, leading to bottlenecks and extended travel times.

In Mukono, where thousands of commuters pass through daily, even a small reduction in road efficiency has a multiplied effect. Delays ripple outward, affecting not only local traffic but also regional movement along the highway.

The economic cost of this congestion is often underestimated. Time lost in traffic translates directly into lost productivity. Traders receive goods late, workers arrive at their jobs exhausted or delayed, and transport costs increase as vehicles consume more fuel while idling.

For businesses operating on tight margins, these inefficiencies can be the difference between survival and collapse. In this sense, restoring order on the roads is not anti-business. It is, in fact, pro-economy.

Safety is another critical dimension. Encroached road reserves create blind spots and unpredictable movement patterns. Pedestrians crossing between stalls, boda bodas making sudden turns, and vehicles navigating through tight spaces all contribute to a heightened risk of accidents.

Emergency services face even greater challenges. An ambulance or fire truck navigating a congested, obstructed road can lose precious minutes, and in emergencies, those minutes can determine outcomes.

There’s also a public health and environmental aspect to consider. Informal roadside trading often lacks proper sanitation and waste management systems. Accumulated garbage, poor drainage, and overcrowding create conditions that can facilitate the spread of disease. By relocating trade into designated areas, the municipality has an opportunity to enforce standards that protect both traders and customers.

Critics of the trade order often frame it as an eviction exercise that targets the vulnerable. This concern is not without merit. Informal traders form a significant part of the urban economy, and many depend on daily sales for survival.

However, the alternative cannot be the permanent occupation of road reserves. Cities that have allowed such practices to continue unchecked have found themselves trapped in cycles of disorder that are difficult and costly to reverse.

The more constructive approach is one that balances enforcement with inclusion. Mukono Municipality must ensure that displaced traders are integrated into formal or semi-formal trading spaces.

Markets should not only exist on paper but should be accessible, affordable, and strategically located to attract customer traffic. Without this, traders will inevitably drift back to the roads, undermining the very objective of the trade order.

Encouragingly, experiences from other urban centres suggest that when properly implemented, such reforms can yield positive outcomes. Organised markets tend to attract more stable customer flows, improve hygiene, and create opportunities for traders to grow their businesses.

Over time, traders benefit from better working conditions, while customers enjoy safer and more predictable shopping environments.

There is also a psychological and reputational dimension to urban order. A well-organised municipality signals seriousness and readiness for investment.

Investors are more likely to commit resources to areas where infrastructure is functional and governance is effective. Mukono, given its strategic location, stands to benefit significantly from this perception shift.

At its core, Mukono’s trade order is a classic case of short-term disruption in pursuit of long-term gain. The immediate impact, particularly on informal traders, is undeniably painful. Livelihoods are interrupted, routines are broken, and uncertainty increases. These are real costs that cannot be dismissed.

However, when weighed against the broader trajectory of the municipality, the rationale becomes clearer. Congestion is not just an inconvenience; it is a structural barrier to growth.

Left unaddressed, it compounds over time, increasing the cost of doing business, reducing quality of life, and straining public services. By acting now, Mukono is attempting to avoid a future where disorder becomes entrenched and far more difficult to correct.

The success of this initiative will ultimately depend on execution. Enforcement alone is insufficient. It must be accompanied by thoughtful planning, stakeholder engagement, and continuous monitoring. Authorities must resist the temptation to treat the exercise as a one-off operation. Urban order is not achieved in a day; it requires sustained effort.

If implemented with consistency and fairness, the trade order has the potential to transform Mukono into a more efficient, safer, and economically vibrant municipality. Reduced congestion will improve mobility along the Kampala–Jinja corridor. Businesses will operate in a more predictable environment. Public spaces will regain their intended purpose.

The beauty of this trade order, therefore, lies not in the clearing of road reserves, but in the vision it represents. It is a statement that Mukono is ready to transition from reactive growth to planned development.

It is an acknowledgment that public space must serve the collective good. And it is a reminder that while change is often uncomfortable, it is also necessary. The path Mukono Municipality has chosen is not the easiest, but it is arguably the right one.

ENDS.

 

Tags: InsightPost-Editorial
ShareTweetPin
Previous Post

Outcry as Patients Expose Bribery and Poor Care at Masaka Regional Referral Hospital

Next Post

Muteesa I Royal University Disqualifies NUP Candidate from Guild Race

Related Posts

Engineer
Opinion

ENGINEERING AN ABSURDITY: When Protectors Of Public Safety Become Persecutors Of Law

May 5, 2026
Phillip Karugaba
Opinion

Opinion: Why the Sovereignty Bill Must Be Withdrawn Now

May 2, 2026
Twiine Mansio Charles, CEO and Founder, The ThirdEye Consults (U).
Opinion

The Suicide Of Ubuntu: Pretoria’s Collapse Into Vigilantism And The Death Of The Pan-African Dream

May 1, 2026
Leonard Kamugisha Akida
Opinion

Beyond The Numbers: Uganda’s Hidden Crisis Of Sexual Violence

April 30, 2026
Man selling pineapples.
Opinion

Uganda’s Jobs Crisis Is No Longer About Numbers, It Is About Survival

April 17, 2026
Twiine Mansio Charles, CEO and Founder, The ThirdEye Consults (U).
Opinion

Arrogance Before The Vatican: Why The Pope Remains The World’s Moral Compass

April 14, 2026
Next Post
Shakira Nanyange and NUP SG

Muteesa I Royal University Disqualifies NUP Candidate from Guild Race

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Busoga Minister Resigns Kingdom Duties to Oust Kadaga from Kamuli Parliamentary seat

Busoga Minister Resigns Kingdom Duties to Oust Kadaga from Kamuli Parliamentary seat

1 year ago
Bishop Sarah Mullally

Anglican Communion Faces New Era With Appointment of First Female Archbishop

7 months ago
Zimbabwe To Slaughter 200 Elephants As Drought-Induced Hunger Worsen

Zimbabwe To Slaughter 200 Elephants As Drought-Induced Hunger Worsen

2 years ago
Why I Fear Bobi Wine with All my Heart and Soul-Eng Tom Isingoma

Why I Fear Bobi Wine with All my Heart and Soul-Eng Tom Isingoma

6 years ago

FOLLOW US

Insight Post Uganda

We bring you the most balanced news professionally investigated by our news team. The Insight Post is Uganda’s News company regulated by the Uganda Communications Commission.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Woman Living With Two Husbands Under One Roof Shocks Residents
  • Government Review of University Sponsorship Scheme Wins Public Support
  • Putin Denounces Nato at Scaled-Back Victory Day Parade

Category

  • Agriculture
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Luganda
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Photos
  • Politics
  • Profiles
  • Religion
  • Runyankole
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Tourism
  • Uncategorized
  • World News

Recent News

Insight Images

Woman Living With Two Husbands Under One Roof Shocks Residents

May 9, 2026
Government Review of University Sponsorship Scheme Wins Public Support

Government Review of University Sponsorship Scheme Wins Public Support

May 9, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2024 The Insight post Uganda - The Insight post uganda. Site Powered by Bookablehood Ltd.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
error: Content is protected !!
en_USEnglish
en_USEnglish
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Tourism
  • Opinion

© 2024 The Insight post Uganda - The Insight post uganda. Site Powered by Bookablehood Ltd.