In P-A-P, there are some people who own cars. Cars are very expensive to buy and maintain though, so most don't. As you travel out from the capital, fewer own cars and more own motorbikes. Farther out in more remote villages and countryside and few even own motorbikes. Those people walk - sometimes lots of miles - to get where they're going. When they travel to market, they walk (carrying stuff they buy/sell on their head) or they ride the family's livestock - mules, horses. We saw a very few riding old bikes.
Seeing motor vehicles on the road is rare, so people stop to look when they hear one.
A Haitian 'taxi' is called a tap-tap. These are everywhere and near the city, they are very colorful. Otherwise, they're converted pickups. Tap-taps carry as many as they can hold - people just pile up in the back and pack in like sardines. Some have a topper of sorts that holds goods and belongings which are (sort of) tied down.
Since not everyone can afford a ride and traffic in the city moves slowly, some hangers-on try to jump onto the back bumper of a truck or cling to the sides to hitch a free ride. Tap-tap drivers have a passenger/helper who acts as security and peels freeloaders off.

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