Petitioning The Prime Minister of India – Road Safety in Delhi

Petitioning The Prime Minister of India – Road Safety in Delhi

Change.org is the world’s largest petition platform, empowering people everywhere to create the change they want to see. A new petition set up by students at IIT New Dehli petitions the Prime Minister of India and calls upon all people in all countries to sign up and help raise awareness of road safety in the country and beyond.

Petition by: Somit Pangtey, New Delhi, India

A few weeks ago four of our friends lost their lives in a horrific car crash on the road to Jaisalmer. A few weeks later another three were victims of a motorcycle crash in our neighboring institution, the Jawaharlal Nehru University. These events have prompted deep introspection on our campus and some of us met last week to discuss what we can do to do move toward safer roads and traffic management in India.

At this meeting it was agreed that we should start a campaign to put pressure on the national government to institute policies that control the scourge of deaths, disabilities and injuries resulting from traffic crashes in India. Road accidents cause about 150,000 deaths, 500,000 disabilities, and 3 million hospitalisations every year. This needless and unnecessary carnage on our roads cannot be allowed to continue.

We will send the appeal below to the Prime Minister and all Chief Ministers. Please sign the appeal and help us take this campaign for traffic safety forward. Please forward this appeal to all your friends so that we can make this a broad based national movement.

Road conditions in India are notoriously dangerous.

The Petition:

To: The Prime Minister of India
We are writing to you as students, parents, teachers, and professionals. The immense toll of deaths and injuries on Indian roads has brought home to us the magnitude of this problem in India. Traffic accidents have become a leading cause of death for young people in our country. This is because of the unconscionable neglect of policies that could reverse this trend.

It is estimated that road traffic crashes in India result in about 150,000 deaths, an estimated 500,000 disabilities and 3,000,000 hospitalisations every year. Many countries around the world have lowered the rates of deaths and injuries due to traffic accidents by putting in place evidence-based scientific safety policies and programmes. We must take this problem seriously and adopt effective safety policies. We have made this an open letter, as the issue has recently become a live debate in the country and urge you to have the following safety policies implemented on an urgent basis.

  1. The National Road Safety and Traffic Management Board Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha in May 2010. The Bill recommends that a statutory National Road Safety and Traffic Management Board be established in India. This Board needs to be established forthwith.
  2. Cars sold in India are not tested for crashworthiness. Crashworthiness standards complying with international best practices must be made compulsory for all motor vehicles sold in India by end of 2016.
  3. Compulsory helmet wearing regulations as included in the Motor Vehicles Act must be notified in all states with immediate effect.
  4. The police departments of all states must enforce compulsory seat belt wearing regulations for all motor vehicle occupants.
  5. The Motor Vehicles Act includes very specific regulations regarding drinking and driving. Special funds must be allocated to enable random breath testing of drivers in all cities and highways.
  6. Notified speed limits must be enforced by special drives, speed cameras, and other technologies on all urban roads and highways.
  7. Provision must be made for establishing a common country wide number for emergency help.
  8. Special trauma care training must be provided for doctors working in all district hospitals.
  9. Establish centres of excellence for traffic safety research in academic institutions around the country
  10. Set up a high level task force to implement the recommendations on traffic safety given by the High Level National Transport Development Policy Committee.

It is important to note that we are in the middle of the United Nations’ Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020. Road traffic injuries and fatalities have been declared a major public health crisis globally. The policy prescriptions listed above are in consonance with those reommended by the World Health Organization to deal with this crisis.

All of us signatories to this appeal expect and hope that you will take an active interest in reducing the number of deaths and injuries on our roads.

Cc: Chief Minsters of all states.

Sincerely,
[Your name]

Communications Officer at YOURS, Mr Manpreet Darroch said, “It is inspiring to see these young people take action against the loss of their friends’ lives. Unfortunately, there are so many friends, family and loved ones killed on the roads every day and this is why young people themselves are taking action to demand road safety. It is a great example of youth taking their message directly to the top with the hopes of changing the status quo. YOURS supports this campaign and we encourage the global youth network for road safety to add their name, every name added is a hand of solidarity in saving young lives”.

Continuing Post-2015 road safety mission at ECOSOC Youth Forum NYC

Continuing Post-2015 road safety mission at ECOSOC Youth Forum NYC

Building on our multiplatform push for road safety to be recognized and included in the youth priorities of the Post-2015 Development Agenda, our work continues at the United Nations’ Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth forum which will take place at the United Nations HQ, New York City, United States. The forum takes place on 2nd-3rd June 2014 building on previous consultations for youth priorities for the Post-2015 Agenda.

With the aim to bring the voice of youth into the discussion on addressing the challenges for meeting the Millennium Development Goals and shaping the future development agenda, the Forum will feature five working sessions where youth representatives will have an opportunity to listen to and engage in an interactive discussion.

The primary participants will be youth delegates, representatives from the Children and Youth Major Group, youth representatives from Member States, including from National Youth Councils, representatives of regional youth organizations as well as youth-led and youth focused organizations and networks, including those in consultative status with ECOSOC.  The meeting will be available through webcast and participants will be able to pose questions via social media through Facebook and Twitter.

The meeting will feature various interactive dialogue sessions (Programme). A series of side events, that will be organized by Member States and the United Nations system during these two days, will offer an opportunity for the youth representatives to engage with each other on the important challenges that they face. (List of Side Events)

The ECOSOC Youth Forum builds on some of the outcomes of the World Conference on Youth, which had the aim of “Mainstreaming Youth in the Post-2015 Development Agenda”.

In July 2014, Member States, policy-makers, civil society organizations, representatives of academia and the private sector will meet in New York during the high-level segment of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) to address the theme of the Annual Ministerial Review (AMR) on

“Addressing on-going and emerging challenges for meeting the Millennium Development Goals in 2015 and for sustaining development gains in the future.”

To bring the voice of youth into the discussion, ECOSOC will convene a Youth Forum on 2 June 2014. The Forum will be organized by the Department of Economic and Social Affairs,1 in collaboration with the Office of the Youth Envoy of the Secretary-General.
The engagement of young people in shaping the global development agenda is critical in shaping the present and safeguarding the future landscape of their countries. They are already actively engaged in trying to shape the post-2015 development and sustainable development agenda. They have participated actively in the “World We Want 2015” Campaign, the NGLS regional consultations and have presented their views to the Open-Ended Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals. The Forum will also build on these consultations as well as youth participation initiatives of UN system partners.

The ECOSOC Forum will also work to cumilate ideas and priorities from the UNSG Envoy’s Crowdsourcing platform.

From the consultations undertaken, it is clear that young people generally feel quite positive about MDGs. Yet, concerns were raised about the fact that a majority of young people are unaware of the strong potential they have in the realization of MDGs, hence the need for an improved dialogue between youth and leaders especially in developing countries. In this regard, youth are asking for the right tools to ensure their participation in policy-making and hold governments accountable in the post-2015 era.

Read more about the ECOSOC Youth Forum

floor 2
Director of YOURS – Mr Floor Lieshout will be attending the event to continue to draw attention to Safe and Sustainable Transport in the Post-2015 Development Agenda – he said:

“This ECOSOC Youth Forum builds on our work for road traffic crashes to be included as a focus in the youth priorities of the Post-2015 Development Agenda. We have seen road injury recognised in the global call on youth 2015 after our successful campaigning on the UNSG Youth Envoy’s Crowdsourcing Platform and lobbying at the World Conference on Youth in Sri Lanka. We are ensuring that road traffic crashes are mentioned and recognised in all the platforms related to youth issues in the Post-2015 Development Agenda as we push for the biggest killer of young people to be seen a health priority in the coming 15 years”

Brian’s Column: Does your organisation have a birthday?

Brian’s Column: Does your organisation have a birthday?

Our regular columnist Mr Brian Bilal Mwebaze is back focusing on the recent 50 year celebrations of Uganda Red Cross since its birth. The organization has used this big milestone to work on road safety initiatives around the country and Brian explores how you can use your organization’s birthday as a platform for action!

Aha! So, when you just thought, we (at YOURS) had gone on vacation without running your favorite #BriansColumn, we, without warning switch the lights on! Salutations from the worlds beautiful continent: Africa ☺ (Don’t be jealous).

Have you ever met some one who swears thunders and typhoons that, interestingly, he or she could do anything? Yeah, is it possible that we could translate that energy by conduction, radiation, convection and this time, by birthdays of your organisation into road safety? Hell, yes…considering that, Road Traffic Crashes are the leading cause of deaths among young people aged 10-24, and most of our organizations have either young staff or are relying heavily on the zeal and zap of its youth volunteers to reach out where it would have been impossible.

For example, the Uganda Red Cross Society (where I work as programme manager for first aid and road safety) has a total of 250,000 volunteers country wide (URCS 2012 report). Out of these 85% are young people aged less than 26! These are spanned across 51 branches all over the country, so when I started asking about young people what our birthday celebrations as an organisation should be, I was thrilled to hear from the horse’s mouth:- ‘Road Safety needs to be in there’.

State minister of refugees and disaster preparedness, Musa Ecweru attended the launch at URCS headquarters in Kampala. PHOTO/Francis Emorut (Newvision Source)

To be precise, the Red Cross and Red Crescent movement all over the world celebrates 8th of May as an international birthday because that was the birth day of its founder Henry Dunant. But in Uganda, the Uganda Red Cross will be celebrating 50 years of existence on 30th July! This acted as an aperitif (like the French call it). With a lot of meetings happening at local and national level, we decided to mobilize every youth leader from each branch to advocate for the inclusion of road safety targeting boda boda riders (local name for motorcyclists), pedestrians and children (as schools were opening in that period).

You can’t underestimate the power of young people. Even when, they didn’t have a formal course in road safety and road safety advocacy, the young people did very well to ensure that our national focus with a bottom up approach culminating into a focus on road safety was fulfilled. I don’t wanna take credit for it (but if you give it to me, I will take it) for it was the young people from the local scenes that did the real job, possibly because the effects and burden of road traffic crashes in Uganda (and your country) is there to see.

Brian’s road safety training wth youth leaders from Uganda Red Cross in action!

The news bulletin can be read here. As a result, we’ve since conducted a basic road safety course for 24 youths leaders from the whole country. The course covered the road safety problem, risk factors like non use of helmets, distracted driving, non use of seatbelts, speeding (not overspeeding) and road safety advocacy.

The course was conducted under a YOURS-workshop approach, which I learnt about during the YOURS Workshop in Nairobi last year! Upon which we give credits to UNRA (Uganda National Roads Authority) and Ministry of Works and Transport for the technical support!

L-R: Helmet removal skills in prehospital care, group discussions on the helmet including myths and facts

Does your organisation have a birthday? Or would you like to initiate a celebration of your organization’s birthday? It’s a time when the organisation wants to do something visible for the community and can use the auspicious occasion to do good on a national level. The same time when they would want their activities to be seen by the greater community. That’s the ripe time to propose to your partner:-in this case, proposing to have road safety in your celebrations. #StaySafe @BrianBilalK1

YOURS endorses UNSG Youth Envoy’s Global Call on Youth Post-2015

YOURS endorses UNSG Youth Envoy’s Global Call on Youth Post-2015

The objective of the GPY2015 partnership is to ensure that young people are actively participating in setting, implementing, and evaluating the new development agenda due to replace the MDGs in 2015. This partnership offers a unique platform for all stakeholders working on youth development to express their views, and help identify specific targets and indicators for youth empowerment, which could feature in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.

The ECOSOC Forum on Youth 2-3 June in New York is approaching fast. Building on input from over 1.2 million young people who voted in the MyWorld2015 survey, as well as the outcome of the crowdsourcing platform launched earlier this year, the United Nations Secretary-General’s Envoy on Youth Ahmad Alhendawi invites all youth organisations, including those who are among the 1,700 members of the Global partnership for youth in the post-2015 development agenda, as well as other partners, to endorse the Global call on youth in post-2015 ahead of the gathering in early June.

“Despite significant progress made since the Millennium Development Goals were adopted, the current generation of youth – the largest the world has ever seen – has been left behind. They are still denied the opportunities they need to realize their full potential,” stresses the Envoy.

Based on the five thematic priorities from the MyWorld2015 survey – Education, Employment and Entrepreneurship, Health, Good Governance, and Peace and Stability – the crowdsourcing platform is run in partnership with ITU, UNFPA, the UN Millennium Campaign, The Major Group on Children and Youth, ICMYO (International Coordination Meeting of Youth Organisations), and the Inter-Agency Network on Youth Development (IANYD). Drawing on the priorities identified in the above-mentioned online crowdsourcing exercise along with the results of recent global, regional and national youth consultations and meetings that have taken place in the context of the post-2015 development agenda process, a team of moderators from youth-led organizations and UN entities have synthesized their outcome and consolidated them into concrete youth-focused target areas, reflected in the Global call on youth in post-2015.

The ECOSOC will take some of the recommendations from the World Conference on Youth and the Colombo Declaration on Youth

By endorsing the Global call on youth, your organization will appear in the list of organizations from around the world that stand behind the call for prioritizing youth in the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Your valuable support will strengthen the consensus: The more we are, the stronger our united voice will be and the better the chances for concrete youth targets to be rightfully included in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.

Road injuries included in Global Call on Youth 2015 outcome document.

For the first time since dilberation and consultations began and our extensive lobbying at the World Conference on Youth and global support for our Crowdsourcing iniative, road injury as a special term has been included in the outcome document of Global Partnership on Youth 2015 which will feed into the talks in the ECOSOC Youth Forum and subsequent conversations on youth perspectives in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.

As the conversations continue, YOURS will be contuing the mission to have the biggest killer of youth, road traffic crashes, included as part of the youth priorities for the Post-2015 Development Agenda.

You can continue to vote for the Right to Safe and Sustainable Transport on the GPY2015 Crowdsourcing platform.

Read The Global Call On Youth “Prioritizing Youth in the Post-2015 Development Agenda” Outcome Document here.

Millions still die on roads every year – an Akili Initative viewpoint

Millions still die on roads every year – an Akili Initative viewpoint

The Akili Initiative is an oranization that focuses on public health issues facing young people on a global scale . Akili has become the emerging voice of students in global health and focus on road safety as the primary health concern facing young people. Read their article on road traffic injury here.

AMIDST VAST IMPROVEMENTS IN MEDICAL CARE, MILLIONS STILL DIE ON ROADS EVERY YEAR

Alexis Fogel & Ben Campbell
Co-Directors at the Akili Initiative

The Emergency Department at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania is state-of-the-art. With a newly built complex and a staff of over 70 doctors and nurses, “the ER here in Tanzania is one of the best in all of Africa,” says Dr. Respicious Boniface, MUHAS physician. “But we experience a volume of patients that is still difficult to manage.” This is chiefly due to the huge number of patients with road traffic injuries (RTIs) that end up in the ER. “It still astonishes me how many of our ER patients, who are in critical care or who have died, are victims of road traffic accidents,” says Boniface, who also heads the hospital’s Injury Control Center.  His serious tone captured the gravity of the situation: “there have been significant advances in care, but the number of deaths from accidents remains very high.”

The situation in Tanzania mirrors an urgent global health epidemic facing many countries around the world. An estimated 1.5 million road deaths still occur each year, with the highest toll in developing countries. In many low- and middle-income countries experiencing welcome economic growth, expanded road infrastructure and access to personal transportation are often accompanied by sharp increases in traffic, air pollution, and deaths due to road traffic accidents. According to a recent report by The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, entitled “Transport for Health,” RTI leads to more deaths than HIV, tuberculosis or malaria.  

“For how many people who are killed every year due to RTI, this is an extremely neglected problem,” says Jeff Witte, executive director of Amend, a road safety NGO working in Africa. Furthermore, its disproportionate impact on young people in developing countries, where more than 90% of RTI occurs, has far-reaching consequences for all members of society. “What we see in the countries where we work,” says Witte, “is that those at highest risk—pedestrians and motorcycle drivers, for example—also tend to be young people in the most productive years of their lives.” According to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2010 Study, RTI is the number one cause of death for young people aged 15-24. This is the subset of society on the verge of crucial leadership roles and employment and educational opportunities necessary to continue development in their countries. However, this insidious cause of death and disability remains woefully underfunded and ignored in comparison to other more publicized threats to global health.

So what is being done to curb this epidemic?  One important effort by Bloomberg Philanthropies and The Global Road Safety Partnership targets ten low and middle-income countries, which comprise nearly half of all road deaths around the world.

This partnership advocates for scaling up cost-effective interventions, including the distribution of helmets, seat belts and child restraints, and education on their proper usage, in addition to wider implementation of speed management and data systems. They also work on the ground to build infrastructure that improves physical road maintenance, transportation systems and available emergency treatment in post-crash care settings.

Another effort by the Vision Zero Initiative in Sweden is leading the way in changing how we approach the design of road transport systems, promoting an understanding of human behavior and interaction with roads as the foundation to prevent death and injury in an increasingly mobile world. Their initiatives to prepare for traffic accidents before they happen is based on one simple principle: “In every situation a person might fail, the road system should not,” proclaims Claes Tingvall, Director of Traffic Safety for the Swedish National Road Administration. Where transport systems traditionally place responsibility for safety on road users, the Vision Zero Initiative instead puts this responsibility on road system design, vehicle technology, and innovative information and surveillance. Already adopted in a number of countries outside Western Europe including Russia, Turkey, and Mexico, Vision Zero provides demonstration projects, consultants and support teams, and a safe road design curriculum tailored to each country’s unique traffic culture and injury reduction targets.

At YOURS – The Youth and Road Safety Action Kit introduces young people to road safety from an interantional perspective.

With these efforts underway, will road traffic injury finally find a place among other major international health priorities? As we come to the close of the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era, the world must convene once again to shape the next global development agenda to begin in 2015. Starting to address this challenging task in 2012, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon appointed a High-Level Panel to make recommendations for the upcoming decades and their final report, entitled “A New Global Partnership,” was recently completed.

The report declares some overarching goals including “Ensuring healthy lives,” which highlights health issues such as AIDS, malaria and TB that are reminiscent of the previous MDGs.  However, nowhere in the 69-page High-Level report is road traffic injury prevention even mentioned.   This is ironic, given the report’s emphasis on the importance of youth in the post-2015 era. 

With an increasing number of young people making up the majority of national populations, especially in developing countries, there must be an explicit inclusion of road traffic injury and its importance to youth in this new development agenda to truly make headway on global development priorities. RTI is a critical issue that needs immediate attention. A global emergency with tremendous human cost, “we need to place this high on the post-2015 agenda,” affirms Witte.

A recent UN Resolution calls for global action on road safety.

What would a target to reduce road traffic deaths for post-2015 look like?  In his recent report on the post-2015 development agenda, entitled, “A life of dignity for all,” UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon recommends that reducing the burden of road traffic injuries should be one of the main targets in a new health goal. Several UN agencies have endorsed a target of reducing the 2010 levels of global road traffic deaths by 50% by 2030. This would be a step in the right direction, but will it even make it into the post-2015 agenda?  There is still time for us to make the case, but the window of opportunity is closing quickly. As we enter the final stages of shaping the post-2015 agenda, young people cannot let this momentous opportunity to prioritize RTI and save millions of lives slip through our fingers any longer.

Uganda Red Cross embarks on boda-boda sensitization for road safety

Uganda Red Cross embarks on boda-boda sensitization for road safety

Uganda Red Cross Society (URCS) is set to sensitize boda-boda riders countrywide on road safety and First Aid treatment, the vice chairman of the central governing board of URCS, Dr. Dominic Lali has announced. Our resident columinst at YOURS – Brian Bilal Mwebaze works with the Uganda Red Cross who are currently spearheading road safety campaigns in the country and as a beacon of action for Africa.

This follows numerous cases of boda-boda –related accidents reported in hospital.

“We are targeting boda-boda men to create awareness on road safety and train them on First Aid treatment when involved in accidents,”

Lali told officials of International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) board members and staff of URCS and the state minister of refugees and disaster preparedness, Musa Ecweru. He made the remarks at the launch of 50 years of URCS’s humanitarian service in Uganda at the agency’s headquarters in Kampala.

The agency has earmarked activities such as mobilization and preparation of communities in disasters response, blood donation drives, provide first aid training to communities, promote healthy living lifestyles, community hygiene sensitization and environment protection to mark the celebrations.

He also called on government to expedite the review of the Red Cross Act 1964 to suit the global trends as the scope of the agency’s activities have multiplied and no longer offering First Aid only as stipulated in the Act.

The vice chairman central governing board of Uganda Red Cross Society Dr. Dominic Lali speaks at the launch. PHOTO/Francis Emorut

The celebrations are held under the theme: “50 years of service-Volunteering for humanity,” and will be climaxed on July 30, at Entebbe. Minister Ecweru backed Dr. Lali in creating road safety awareness, saying schools should also be targeted. The minister was angry that people use sophisticated gadgets such as earphones plugged in their ears when crossing main roads.

“There is a crisis and Red Cross should help us to sensitize people who plug gadgets in their ears when crossing the road. Sometime back people were very careful before crossing the road – they would first look left and then right but today this is not the case,” observed Ecweru.

Ken Odur, the interim secretary general of URCS, pointed out that the agency has been involved in recovery programmes for affected communities when calamities strike, proving safe clean water especially to refugee camps, distributing relief items to affected communities and capacity-building in early warning and action and others.

In many parts of the world, Boda Boda (border to border taxis) have become commonplace as a form of transport and a frequent means of employability for youth, especially in Eastern Africa.

The agency has 51 branches across the country serving a population of over one million.He said donors have resumed supporting the agency following administrative management issues that were sorted out, which led to a forensic audit whose report is to be released soon. Read the original article here.