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Home FOOD SECURITY

Affordable tuk-tuks give new job opportunity to youth in Mogadishu

Radio Ergo by Radio Ergo
June 15, 2025
in FOOD SECURITY, LATEST STORIES, SOCIAL
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Affordable tuk-tuks give new job opportunity to youth in Mogadishu

Adan Sheikh Ali with his tuk-tuk that lifted him out of unemployment and helped support his family / Mohamed Khadar / Ergo

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(ERGO) – A company set up by a Somali returnee offering easy loans or rental of motorbikes in Mogadishu is proving a popular way for unemployed youth, some of them also returnees from abroad, to earn a living.

Abdullahi Ahmed Jilacow, 50, returned from Germany after 15 years and bought five Bajaj motorbikes. Now his Al Baraka Bajaj company has sold or rented out motorbikes to 200 youth, at a time when banks have stopped offering motorbike loans.

The company sells motorbikes with flexible payment plans and minimal administration. They need a driving licence and a guarantor who can be a parent. For those renting, they don’t need to pay for days when they were sick or faced other difficulties or illness.

According to Abdullahi, he is partnering young people to give them better opportunity.

“A person who yesterday couldn’t manage his family or provide for his wife and children now prays for me and says, ‘Now I work; before I had nothing. I provide for my wife, my parents.’ Some are joining savings groups to build up funds. This is what makes me happy and why I love this work. If you achieve something yourself, you feel joy. But if you help another person, your brother, feel joy, you experience something even greater,” Abdullahi told Radio Ergo.

“To a poor person who has nothing to be told, ‘You will own this and work with it, and it will be your own by paying $20 a day,’ they will work hard and have ambition. They will know that tomorrow they can become someone and will own this motorbike and manage their family.”

Liban Ali Ibrahim, 42, has been earning $30 to $40 a day since January, driving motorbikes in District of Twenty in Banadir region.

“When a person works, they are productive. It includes being able to pay house bills, electricity, water and small needs like healthcare and school fees. The company has helped me a lot,” he said.

Liban was unemployed and his two wives and 13 children used to rely on relatives for food. In March, he enrolled four of his children in primary and middle school paying $90 monthly for their food, education, and transport.

“When a person works, they are productive and contribute to their community. I gained all this through this company where I am a driver. If I didn’t have this job, there would be no life. You can imagine the burden on a man with two families who is unemployed,” he said.

He has two rented motorbikes to navigate Mogadishu’s traffic management system that categorises motorbikes for access to the city on alternate days.

He pays $15 daily to operate them and after the household expenses still saves $180-200 a month.

“As I have a large family, it is essential for me to put something aside. I also want to make a change and create job opportunities by starting a business like this with two or three motorbikes,” he said.

“It is the youth, our future, who can change this country. The elders have had their time. So when we think about our youth and support and encourage them and create jobs for them, this country will have a future.”

Meanwhile, Aden Sheikh Ali bought a motorbike worth $4,500 on credit from Abdullahi Ahmed Jilacow’s company in March. He has to pay back $10 a day and easily earns three times that in his profits.

Aden had lived in South Africa for 12 years, but returned to Somali with nothing after an armed group looted and set fire to the shop he co-owned with two other Somalis. He managed to rescue $700 from the nearly $20,000 worth of goods her had in the shop to buy an air ticket back to Mogadishu in 2023.

Unemployment back home him desperate, and he considered migrating again to Libya or Saudi Arabia.

After two miserable years, Aden, 37, said the motorbike deal has enabled him to become financially independent and to support his wife, six children, and mother

“I earn more than I did in South Africa, and I’m together with my family. My children play around me. Before, I was away and had no happiness.

We were struggling with bills and everything. Now this job has brought me many things and given me much ambition. I believe there is no better place for me than this country,” Aden said.

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