Takoradi witnessed a wave of change on 15th and 17th April 2025 as the Kasa for Safety road safety campaign made its highly anticipated stop in the Western Region. The activation took place at two major transport hubs in the Western Region—Kwesimintsim Station and Tarkwa Station—where the team rolled out impactful education sessions and direct engagements. The bold Kasa for Safety stickers, placed inside trotros and long-distance buses, urge passengers to speak up against reckless driving and reinforce a culture of accountability on the road.
“We’re not just pasting stickers—we’re starting a culture shift,” said Akosua Afriyie Osei-Appaw, co-founder of Impact Sync and Team Lead of the campaign. “For too long, passengers have felt powerless in the face of dangerous driving. With every sticker and every conversation, we’re reinforcing the message that silence can be deadly, but speaking up can save lives.”
The team also engaged with drivers on hazard perception and being receptive to the concerns of passengers. The drivers were highly receptive of the campaign and urged the team to visit a lot more trotro stations in the region.
“The passengers do not respect us” Michael – a driver in Takoradi noted. “Sometimes, how they even talk to you can distract you and lead to an accident but I believe we need to work together for our own safety. A lot of us (both drivers and passengers) need this sensitization”
In addition to engaging drivers and passengers on hazard perception and defensive driving practices, the Kasa for Safety team met with regional executives of the Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU). The dialogue focused on strategies to deepen road safety education and foster more responsive driver behavior across stations in the Western Region.
“Takoradi has been incredibly receptive,” noted Yaw Tweneboah Kodua Odoom, co-founder of Impact Sync. “The GPRTU executives shared great insights and pledged their support to sustain this campaign in the region. Road safety is a shared responsibility—drivers, passengers, unions—we all have a role to play.”
The campaign’s interactive approach is what sets it apart. Passengers were not just spoken to—they were empowered. Many shared personal experiences of reckless driving and left with a renewed sense of responsibility to speak up and encourage safer travel practices.
“What you’re doing is a good thing. When we talk, the drivers do not listen to us. Even your fellow passengers will tell you to keep quiet when you speak up” Abeiku, a passenger, lamented.
This Takoradi engagement is part of a broader, long-term vision to take the Kasa for Safety message across all 16 regions of Ghana within the next five years.
The Kasa for Safety campaign, a fast-growing citizen-led road safety initiative, is designed to empower passengers in public transport to speak up against reckless driving. At its heart, the campaign believes that every passenger has the power to prevent accidents by holding drivers accountable in real time. The campaign works by placing bold, easy-to-read stickers inside commercial vehicles, encouraging passengers to speak up when they notice reckless or unsafe driving behaviour.
Spearheaded by Impact Sync and TroTro Diaries, the campaign since its launch in July 2024 has pasted about 1800 stickers in Greater Accra and Western Regions reaching over 250,000 passengers using public transport.
The current partners supporting the campaign include D-Prize, Star Oil, and Best Auto Solutions Ghana. Their support has been instrumental in scaling the campaign and amplifying the impact of each activation.
As the Kasa for Safety campaign continues to spread, one message remains at its heart:
Silence isn’t safe. Kasa for Safety.