Egyptian cabinet approves tougher penalties in traffic law

The Egyptian Cabinet approved amendments to Traffic Law No. 66 of 1973 during its 72nd meeting to boost public safety and reduce road accidents through stricter penalties. These include administrative fines and extra taxes on unlicensed or expired vehicles, plus fines from EGP 2,000 to EGP 10,000 for speeding and improper lane use. Repeat offenders face doubled fines, license suspensions, and imprisonment for offenses like driving without a license.

The Egyptian Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, held its 72nd meeting and approved a package of decisions, including amendments to Traffic Law No. 66 of 1973 aimed at improving road safety. The changes introduce administrative fines and additional taxes on vehicles operating without valid licenses or with expired registrations. Fines are set between EGP 2,000 and EGP 10,000 for violations such as speeding and improper lane usage.

For repeat offenders, penalties will be harsher, including doubled fines and license suspensions for issues like littering, excessive noise, or unsafe goods transport. Driving without a license or tampering with license plates is now criminalized, with imprisonment for repeat offenses. Commercial transport violations face increased penalties, combining higher fines with possible jail terms.

This approval forms part of broader decisions covering healthcare, infrastructure, vocational training, and economic reform, but the traffic amendments stand out for their focus on curbing accidents through stricter enforcement.

Artigos relacionados

President Ruto endorses NCAJ road safety measures including PSV certification, smart cameras, and instant fines at a Nairobi press event.
Imagem gerada por IA

Ruto endorses NCAJ recommendations for road safety

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

President William Ruto has received and endorsed recommendations from the National Council on the Administration of Justice (NCAJ) to improve road safety in Kenya. The recommendations include mandatory defensive driving certification for public service vehicle (PSV) operators and the rollout of decentralised vehicle inspections through a public-private partnership starting July 1. He also ordered the installation of smart traffic cameras and an instant fines system in major cities within one month.

A Kenya Transporters Association (KTA) apelou ao lançamento imediato de um sistema de multas de trânsito no local pagáveis através de plataformas de mobile money, visando eliminar a aplicação judicial convencional que descreve como custosa e ineficiente. O grupo argumenta que isso aliviaria os atrasos nos tribunais e impulsionaria a segurança rodoviária. A proposta surge enquanto a National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) se prepara para lançar multas instantâneas no âmbito do impulso de Quénia para serviços digitalizados.

Reportado por IA

The Egyptian Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, approved golden licenses for two strategic projects worth EGP 15.1 billion to localize industry and attract foreign investment. The decisions were made during its 71st meeting, focusing on an automotive manufacturing complex and a factory for office supplies and school tools. The initiatives are expected to create thousands of jobs and boost exports.

Building on the second tax facilitation package launched December 23, Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk detailed new incentives at a December 29 panel, including concessional financing for the first 100,000 taxpayers joining the simplified tax system, sample-based audits, limited penalties, and three advanced tax centers, to boost compliance and growth.

Reportado por IA

Egypt’s Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk announced the mid-April launch of a mobile app offering full real estate tax services electronically, from registration to payment. He spoke during an open discussion with officials from real estate tax regions and offices. Officials also detailed new exemptions, incentives, and procedural simplifications.

A National Land Transport Amendment Act, em vigor a partir de 12 de setembro de 2025, iniciou um período de 180 dias para o setor de e-hailing da África do Sul cumprir novas regulamentações. Plataformas como Uber e Bolt devem se registrar no National Public Transport Regulator antes que os motoristas possam obter licenças de operação. Com o prazo se aproximando em 11 de março de 2026, o progresso permanece lento, arriscando a ilegalidade para milhares de operadores.

Reportado por IA

Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly announced on Monday that Egypt will raise the national minimum wage and implement government spending cuts to mitigate the domestic economic impact of regional military escalation. The decisions came during a meeting of the Central Crisis Management Committee, chaired by Madbouly, to monitor repercussions from US-Israeli operations in Iran and broader regional developments.

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar