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Somalia’s tuk-tuks stall as Iran war drives fuel price spike

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The ​conflict has nearly halted shipments of around one-fifth ⁠of the world’s oil.
Drivers of tuk‑tuk taxis in Somalia’s capital are abandoning their livelihoods as fuel prices ​surge, pushed up by disruptions to oil shipments ‌linked to the Iran conflict.
With fares rising, passengers have dropped away and many drivers in Mogadishu say they can no ​longer keep their three-wheelers on the road.
The ​conflict has nearly halted shipments of around one-fifth ⁠of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas ​via the Strait of Hormuz, leaving African nations among ​the most exposed by supply disruptions and rising prices for fuel and food.
“There are no passengers. People stay home or ​walk on foot. We raised fares because fuel ​prices went up,” Hasan Suleiman, a 21-year-old tuk-tuk driver, told Reuters ‌in ⁠Mogadishu.
“The city has few passengers and they won’t pay the higher fares. We have inevitably parked the tuk-tuks,” he said.
Fuel prices in some parts of ​Somalia have ​more than doubled, ⁠raising transportation costs for passengers and businesses.
Already 6.5 million people, roughly a ​third of the Horn of Africa country’s ​total ⁠population, face severe hunger amid drought.
“The tuk-tuk needs fuel, and I need to provide for my family from what it ⁠earns. ​We are in a very ​bad condition,” said Jamal Omar, a 55-year-old tuk-tuk driver.
—Reuters—