Law Allowing Reintroduction of Alcoblow on Kenyan Roads Takes Effect

Law Allowing Reintroduction of Alcoblow on Kenyan Roads Takes Effect

A new law allowing traffic police to reintroduce breathalyzers, popularly known as Alcoblow, on Kenyan roads has taken effect.

The Traffic (Amendment) Act, 2022, which seeks to tame drink-driving, came into effect on Monday following its assent by President Kenyatta on June 21st.

The Traffic Act of 2013 was reviewed to address a conflict with the Traffic (Breathalyzer) Rules, 2011 which criminalized drink-driving, an offense the principal act did not provide for.

While the amended act made drink-driving an offense only if the update of alcohol impairs the ability of a driver to competently control a vehicle, the breathalyzer rules set a threshold beyond which drivers were considered to be intoxicated beyond allowed limits, hence in breach of the law.

The revised act reconciles legislation on drink-driving by introducing a two-year jail term or a Sh100,000 fine for drivers whose alcohol levels exceed prescribed limits.

 “Any person who, when driving or attempting to drive, or in charge of a motor vehicle on a road or other public place, is under the influence of an alcoholic drink or a drug beyond the prescribed limits, shall be guilty of an offense and, liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred thousand or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or to both,” the law reads in part.

The amended provisions emanated from a 2014 Appeal Court ruling that declared that alcoblow rules had introduced a new offense that was not provided for the principal act.

A breathalyzer is an electronic device used to estimate the blood alcohol content (BAC) from a breath sample.

Drivers are prohibited from handling a vehicle if they have consumed alcohol in excess of 35 micrograms per 100 milliliters of breath, 80 milligrams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood, and 107 milligrams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of urine.

Per the breathalyzer scale, a driver is allowed to drive if their alcohol level ranges between zero and 0.29 on the calibrator. Drivers of public service vehicles are entirely prohibited from driving after drinking, and their test result should read zero. Private motorists are allowed up to 0.35 micrograms of intoxication.
 

Comments

MakOnyango (not verified)     Mon, 07/11/2022 @ 02:05pm

This should be enforced like there is no tomorrow. Too many innocent lives are lost annually because someone was too drunk to walk, so he drove.

MakOnyango (not verified)     Mon, 07/11/2022 @ 02:07pm

This should be enforced to the "T". Many innocent wananchi die everyday because someone was too wasted to walk but chose to drive.

Menye (not verified)     Tue, 07/12/2022 @ 09:05am

Millionaires in Kenya will be increasing daily although none of them will represent me when receiving bribes as some Kenyan fools believe.A MuGikuyu idiot threatened to beat me yesterday for saying Uhuru led other elite gangsters in corruption.But I wonder whether Uhuru’s DUI impunity will continue after 09/08/2022.

Maxiley (not verified)     Tue, 07/12/2022 @ 01:55pm

I have head stories like ," Mr xxx,and yyy can drink till they almost passout,but once they are behind the stiring wheel,they miraculously sober up", what a bucketfull of bull... Some ignoramus segment of our society look with awe that I have quoted here instead of fear and trepidation.
People who drive drunk are very selfish in addition to breaking the law.Why do you want to put innocent people at risks when the risk can be avoided?
Unfortunately folks, the real test comes after the gadget has given its readings.Will the cops take bribes,and let the drunk drivers off the hook to go and cause vehicular mayhem ,or worse?Bear in mind that police especially the traffic police are the most corrupt government employees according to IT( Transparency International.
So a cop who "free" a drunk driver for a fee,should face the same charges.

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
CAPTCHA
1 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.