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Why Road Safety is the Casualty? |
TODAY, the World Health Day is being
observed it with an extremely relevant theme: "Road Safety is No
Accident". In India, it is a continuing series of accidents.
First, the National Road Safety Policy
adopted in 1992 cannot even be found in the Ministry of Road Transport
and Highways or its Web site. One understands that a new one is
being drafted. Second, the 1992 policy had a clear goal to reduce
the number of accidents, but they have been going up exponentially.
A Planning Commission study estimates the economic cost of accidents to be in the region of 3 per cent of GDP. While the Government is engaged in a worthwhile project of building roads, what of the lives lost on roads? Now consider this:
- India has one of the highest per capita accidents
in the world — roughly 86,000 people get killed and more than
four lakh get injured or crippled every year.
- According to the International Road Traffic Federation,
India stands fourth in the number of accidents after the US, Japan
and Germany.
- But it tops the world in road fatalities — its
fatality rate is 1.97 per 1,000 vehicles compared to Germany's
0.20.
- With just 1 per cent of the global vehicle population
(and a road network of just 3.3 million km), India has 6 per cent
of the total accidents of the world.
- There is an accident every 90 seconds and every
seven minutes a fatality.
Now multiply this with all the thousands
of km of new roads and highways. Forget the environmental costs,
road accidents account for a loss of Rs 6.95 crore to the national
exchequer. And that is discounting the social costs — the loss of
the breadwinner and long-term injuries or trauma for the victims
and their family. Experts estimate road accidents account for an
annual social loss of Rs 55,000 crore.
Unless road safety is given the high
priority it deserves in the development of the current infrastructure,
the statistics will continue to rise. Unless the policy-makers create
room for greater investment in more rigorous training of road users
and drivers, the death toll will continue to mount. Besides maintenance
of roads and enforcement of the law, it is education and training
alone that will change the situation. It is well established that
the vehicle driver is a very significant factor in a road accident
— about 50 per cent of accidents are caused due to the driver's
fault. Thus, the quality of drivers has special significance, and
correct training and effective licensing are the two vital fundamentals
of a quality driver.
It is a fact that the majority of
drivers in India have hardly any formal training. In 1992, when
the National Road Safety Policy was being drafted, it was found
that out of about 350 lakh people engaged in driving different kinds
of motorised vehicles, about 20 lakh were deployed on heavy transport
vehicles.
That figure has gone up significantly
in the past decade. More highways mean more heavy vehicles, which
means more ill-trained drivers on the road. And the connection to
greater number of accidents is established. Training and regulation
of such drivers, therefore, needs special attention. So, though
the Government has directed attention on awareness programmes, it
needs to pull up state transport departments and traffic police,
which are the local licensing and enforcement authorities, into
conducting training programmes if some measure of success is to
be found in reducing the number of road casualties.
Important aspects of road safety need
to be built into the programme. These include: Knowledge of traffic
rules, regulations and road signs, punishment to drivers violating
traffic rules and speed limits, driving under the influence of liquor
or drugs (or while using mobile phones) and the elementary mechanism
of vehicle and driver fitness and upgrading the quality and instructions
imparted by motor driving schools also. Incidentally, the training
should be equally mandatory for the regulators, that is the traffic
personnel.
And it is not enough to train drivers
technically alone. Social and psychological training also needs
to be factored into any module that is designed. It is a known fact
that aggressiveness and loss of patience are increasingly leading
to a worsening road situation in India. There are too many high-profile
cases of road rage reported in the media to dispute the fact.
Licensing also needs to be made more
stringent. The licensing process in most cities and towns, particularly
the manner of testing driving skill and knowledge of traffic regulation,
is a joke. What is more, the control should not end at the issuing
of a licence; refresher courses and further tests should be made
mandatory at the time of renewal or periodically.
Policy-makers need to take a structured approach to building this component into road safety policies, and fast. Or else, all awareness programmes, such as the ones the Government is currently running, will be consigned to the dust as that grand document, the National Road Safety Policy. In this, the civil society movement also needs to be a more active player than it is.
Until this happens, we will continue to see scooterists overtake other vehicles from the left and swerve into the right lane barely missing another vehicle, or drivers swinging out nonchalantly from by-lanes straight into a collision. Or more tragedies on the road.
By: Pradeep S. Mehta
Date: Wednesday, Apr 07, 2004
Source: http://www.blonnet.com/2004/04/07/stories/2004040700010900.htm
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