Life and death on Thailand’s lethal roads – A global feature

Life and death on Thailand’s lethal roads – A global feature

There is a ritual that is now very familiar to Thais, before the two big holiday seasons of the year, in late December for the new year, and in April for the Songkran Festival.

The government will set a target for reducing fatalities on Thailand’s notoriously dangerous roads, exhorting Thais not to speed, or drink and drive. Sometimes good citizens will run publicity stunts, like the coffin-maker, who last year invited journalists to film the huge stockpile his workers were building up for the holiday season. And every year these efforts fail.

Thailand remains a popular tourist hotspot for its paradise like beaches and cosmopolitan cities.

The grim statistics of death and injury on the roads are tallied each day in the media with, as often as not, worse figures than the year before.

And so it was this last new year – 478 people lost their lives on the roads in just seven days.

In one horrific collision in Chonburi on 2 January, 25 people died – some burned to death in a crushed and overcrowded passenger van they could not escape.

Thailand’s roads are currently ranked the second most lethal in the world after Libya’s by the World Health Organization.This status is all the more extraordinary given the fact that Thailand has been peaceful and increasingly prosperous for decades, with governments that in other fields, like healthcare and infrastructure, have made impressive progress. In 2011 the then-government announced the following ten years as Thailand’s ‘Decade of Action on Road Safety’.

It declared 2012 as the year of 100 percent helmet use on motorbikes.

In 2015 the Department of Disaster Prevention, which is tasked with road safety in addition to problems like floods and landslides, boldly announced a target of reducing road deaths by 80%. All in vain.

The challenge they face is not hard to see. Thailand’s rapid development has bequeathed it an unrivalled network of 462,133 roads in the region, nearly all paved, with plenty of multi-lane highways. There are 37 million registered vehicles, 20 million of them motorbikes, and millions more that are unregistered.

In the latest high-profile accident, a pick-up truck collided with a passenger van, killing 25 people

Driving on a Thai expressway is akin to playing a hyper-caffeinated video game. A cursory web search for road accident videos will throw up examples of breathtaking, sometimes suicidal, recklessness. Drunk driving is a huge problem.

Road crashes in Thailand

  • 2nd in the world for road accident deaths, after Libya.
  • 24,000 people are estimated to die on Thai roads every year.
  • 73% of those killed are motorcyclists.
  • 36.9m vehicles ply Thai roads – it’s gone up by 30% in the last five years.

Police Sergeant-Major Kanthachat Nua-on can attest to that. At a speed trap he had set up on a stretch of elevated expressway outside Bangkok, he watched car after car pass him at speeds well in excess of the 80km/h (50 mph) limit. He did not bother to ticket them.

“If we strictly follow what the law says, and issue a ticket for people driving over the speed limit, then we will end up booking everyone.”

He booked just one car, travelling at 129km/h. But the fines are small, and more than half of those ticketed do not bother to pay, with little follow-up.

In recent years there have been a number of cases where drivers from wealthy families have killed, and been treated with extraordinary leniency.In 2012 the grandson of the man who made a fortune from the Red Bull energy drink killed a policeman while driving at speed in his Ferrari. He was charged, but has repeatedly failed to show up in court.

Another case was that of a 16-year-old girl from an influential family, driving without a license, who struck a passenger van, killing nine of its occupants. She was given a suspended prison sentence, and ordered to do community service – which it turned out two years later she had avoided doing.

Law enforcement problem

“Enforcement is the key”, says Ratana Winther. “But that is not just about telling the police to enforce the law. The police should be told to prioritise traffic policing over traffic management.

“But it is a multi-sectoral challenge. The punishment needs to be big enough for people to be afraid of it. And the safety campaigns must be continuous, not just at peak seasons. Then we need to move on to issues like improving the engineering of roads.”

Former Deputy Transport Minister and safety campaigner Nikorn Chamnong goes further.

“We need to go back and change the DNA of the country,” he says. “Education, right back in schools, is important”.

He has been petitioning the current military-appointed National Assembly to do more. It is now on the point of approving ten changes to driving laws, including mandating the use of rear seatbelts – overall the largest overhaul of road safety legislation in 40 years. But no-one knows how well these laws will be enforced.

Members of the public are cynical. “There is a saying, that a true Thai follows his own rules,” said Pongsak Putta, a motorbike taxi driver, who was hit by a car and injured over the new year.

“As long as it does not happen to them, people do not think safety is an issue,” said Pornpen Wongbantoon, who complains about the poor driving of the buses she has to take to work.

“Enforcement is everything,” says Dr Liviu Vedrasco, who works on road safety at the World Health Organization.

The government officials he works with are serious about road safety, he believes, but co-ordination is a real challenge.

Separate motorbike lane?

The Road Safety Direction Centre is responsible for leading on the issue, but is subsumed within the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department, which is itself within the Ministry of Interior. Roads are the responsibility of the Ministry of Transport.

Dr Vedrasco believes the best way to cut the appalling death toll on the roads is to focus on the most vulnerable group, motorbikes, which account for 80% of deaths.

“If you cannot reduce the number of motorbikes, the next best thing is separating them. Make a dedicated lane; maybe not a hundred percent of roads in Thailand, but aim to increase the percentage of roads with separated traffic – this will definitely have a tremendous impact.”

The parents of Hathaitip Modpai, one of the victims of the 2 January crash, have been grieving their daughter’s death.

After the shocking collision in Chonburi, the government has promised to phase out passenger vans, which it says are not designed to carry up to 15 people over long distances.

The police believe the 64 year-old driver fell asleep at the wheel. He was on his fifth 300km, 3.5 hour journey in 33 hours.

Twenty-six-year-old Hathaitip Modpai was one of the victims. She had been travelling in the van back from a new year visit to her parents to Bangkok, where she worked as a car saleswoman. She was an only child.

After her funeral, her mother, Wimol, reflected on what the impact of her daughter’s death would be.

“I wish the government would do more,” she said. “After the accident people got excited for a while, but once the fuss dies down, everything will go back to the way it was before.” Read the article at BBC.

Save the Date: Fifth Global Meeting – Global Alliance of Road Safety NGOs

Save the Date: Fifth Global Meeting – Global Alliance of Road Safety NGOs

Fifth Global Meeting of Nongovernmental Organizations Advocating for Road Safety and Road Victim
5 and 6 April 2017 at the Sama-Sama Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The Alliance will bring together global members, dignitaries and distinguished guests from the field of road safety and public health. We will inspire you through panel discussions and presentations on topics of interest, and provide ample opportunities for networking and learning from NGOs around the world. 

The main aims are to facilitate members’ continued involvement in reaching the Sustainable Development Goals and to prepare for important road safety key events, such as the Fourth UN Road Safety Week in May 2017. Pre-meetings leading up to the Meeting will offer specific member-requested trainings, workshops and sharing of best practices.

The Global Meeting will feature:

  • Keynote addresses from road safety leaders;
  • Pointed discussions on topics of concern for all stakeholders;
  • Training to grow capacity of members and stakeholders;
  • Focus on building important partnerships between NGOs, bi-and multilateral organizations and private sector;
  • Awards for outstanding Alliance Members who are building momentum in their countries.

The Fifth Global Meeting is hosted by the Global Alliance of NGOs for Road Safety and the Malaysian Ministry of Transport and co-sponsored by the World Health Organization, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Road Safety, Global Road Safety Facility, World Bank and FedEx and more.


Date, venue and agenda

The Fifth Global Meeting of Nongovernmental Organizations Advocating for Road Safety and Road Victims will be held on 5-6 April 2017 and pre-meetings will be held on 3-4 April 2017. It will be held in Kuala Lumpur at the Sama-Sama Hotel, Jalan CTA 4B 64000 KLIA, Sepang, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia. 

The provisional agenda for the Global Meeting is available here:

DOWNLOAD PROVISIONAL GLOBAL MEETING AGENDA

Please add suggestions for topics you would like see covered in the pre-meetings and trainings HERE.

Registration for the Meeting is now open. Please register HERE.

The Alliance has a limited number of grants available for Alliance Members only. Information has been sent directly to all Members. Find information about the grants and a link to the application here in English, Spanish and French.

For information on sponsorship opportunities, please contact Lotte Brondum, Executive Director, at lotte@roadsafetyngos.org. For any other information about the upcoming Global Meeting, please send your questions to globalmeeting2017@roadsafetyngos.org.

Global Meeting Supporters

Major supporters of the Fifth Global Meeting include FedEx.

Distracted Driving: Simpler distractions can also be risky

Distracted Driving: Simpler distractions can also be risky

Perhaps you’ve heard the claim that talking on the phone while driving is as risky as driving drunk. Indeed, a driving simulator study found “profound” impairments in both cellphone chatters and in people with a blood alcohol level of 0.08.

But here’s the surprising thing: It doesn’t seem to make a difference whether drivers are using hand-held phones or hands-free systems. What matters is simply that they are talking with someone outside the car.

Everyone understands the risk of taking your eyes off the road or your hands off the steering wheel, says David Teater, senior director of transportation strategic initiatives for the National Safety Council. But most people don’t appreciate the demands of driving on the parts of your brain involved in attention, planning and language, Teater says.

Talking on the phone uses some of the same brain space that driving does. So if you’re trying to do both, at least one of them is going to suffer.

It’s a problem of dual tasks, says David Strayer, a cognitive scientist at the University of Utah. Some dual tasks are no problem, such as walking and chewing gum at the same time. Others are trickier, such as patting your head and rubbing your belly.

recent study demonstrates that driving while conversing falls squarely in that tricky category. Researchers measured reaction times in young adult drivers exposed to a variety of traffic situations in a driving simulator. Talking on a hand-held cellphone slowed drivers’ reactions to seeing a pedestrian enter a crosswalk by 40 percent compared with no conversation. The effect was identical for drivers who talked on a hands-free phone.

How do other distractions compare? Here’s the research on some common car activities (besides driving):

audiobookIs talking on the phone more distracting than listening to an audiobook?

small 2008 study showed that when people listened to an audiobook (in this case, “Dracula”), their performance was the same as when they drove without distraction. But when they carried on a phone conversation with one of the researchers (about hobbies and weekend activities), their performance worsened.

 

 

radio 1How distracting is radio?

Strayer partnered with the American Automobile Association to try to measure the relative strength of various cognitive distractions on driving. Study subjects were tested in a driving simulator or a real car while listening to the radio or a book on tape. On a scale of 1 (no distraction) to 5, radio measured 1.2 and the audiobook measured 1.75. The distraction that rated a 5 was to have drivers try to solve math problems and remember a series of words.

 


passengerIs talking on the phone more distracting than talking to a passenger?

The cognitive workload for the driver is the same, according to Strayer. In his test, conversing with a passenger rated a 2.3 on the 1-to-5 scale; talking on a hand-held phone, a 2.4; and a hands-free phone, a 2.3. However, having another person in the car generally results in safer driving, because there’s often an extra set of eyes on the road. Also, passengers tend to stop talking when the demands of driving increase, Strayer says. “So passenger and cell conversations have different crash risks because the passenger helps out.”

Note: Teen passengers don’t have the same helpful effect with teen drivers.

Are there apps for that?
There are apps that when enabled — or when you’re traveling over, say, 10 mph — automatically answer calls (and texts) and apps that will read your text messages or e-mails aloud to you. One recent study found that listening to (but not answering) a ringing phone while driving was a distraction.

Despite the data, there’s no indication that people are giving up their phone conversations. There are probably plenty of reasons for that, but it’s hard to tackle a lack of self-awareness — or worse, hubris. “People notice others driving erratically and talking on their phones, but they don’t notice themselves making similar driver errors,” Strayer says.

In the past, people would brag about being good drivers even when drunk, Teater says. The same thing is happening now with cellphones. Teater’s work was spurred by the death of his 12-year-old son in a cellphone-related car accident. “You never think it will happen to you — until it does,” he says. Read the original article here.

Distracted Driving: Simpler distractions can also be risky

Brian’s Column: Reporting back from Kenya workshop

Our monthly columnist Mr. Brian Bilal Mwebaze joins in the new year reflecting on his experiences in road safety in Africa. Brian recently visited Nairobi, Kenya to partake in the 1st Africa Road Safety Data Workshop. He shares some of his learning from the workshop here.

A few weeks ago, while at the meeting with stakeholders planning for National Road Safety Week Celebrations, I was asked by a media friend how I came to join Youth for Road Safety consequently as their Anglophone Africa Regional Coordinator. My response, “I practiced what I preached and secondly, I asked”. And asked I did to the organizers of the 1st Africa Road Safety Data Workshop consequently hurling me into mix of things.

The regional workshop on road safety was hosted by the Kenya National Transport and Safety Authority and co- organised by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, the Africa Transport Policy Program (SSATP), the World Bank and the International Road Traffic Accident Database organisation (IRTAD) of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development OECD, at The Tribe Hotel-Nairobi from 13th to 15th December 2016.

Deleages to the Nairobi workshop.

The workshop covered United Nations Road Safety legal Instruments, fundamentals of road safety data management and minimum data requirements for all African countries to monitor progress towards the Decade of Action for Road Safety and Sustainable Development Goals.

Speaking at the opening of the workshop, the UN Special Envoy on Road Safety Jean Todt challenged all participants to “do something” after the workshop. To me he highlighted the focus of road safety at global level to be translated into action at local levels when he said,

“The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals have set a strong impetus for us to increase and enhance our efforts to improve the road safety situation, especially at the national and regional levels. With my appointment, The United Nations Secretary-General saw a great need for increased global commitment to road safety”.

I also was happy to meet with @bettyobwocha :-an Online Subeditor @DAILY NATION-Kenya. As Duncan Kibogong from National Transport & Safety Authority-Kenya put it “20-44 age group contributes about 64% of all road traffic deaths in Kenya yet they’re most productive”. With Betty, we had meaningful preliminary chat on improving road safety reporting in Kenya and Anglophone Africa. In specificity, we discussed about forming a  Road Safety Journalist Corner for which young people, bloggers & activists can airout their concerns on Road Safety Risks including Youth & Adolescent Road Safety Data issues. We do anxiously all look forward to the “Action” part. Photocredits Fatiha Taban

YOURS may have set the first structure of Country Level Road Safety Youth Champions but we need more space for and young people to make actions to reduce their number 1 killer.

#HomeForDinner: Teen from New Zealand shares a message

#HomeForDinner: Teen from New Zealand shares a message

A teen from Hamilton, New Zealand has shown the power of genuine social media messaging and taking action for road safety. After experiencing loss due to road crashes, the 14 year old turned to what he knew, social media, to share a geniune message about keeping safe and making it #HomeForDinner. The message has gone viral and shared thousands of times. We celebrate his creativity and action for responsible road use here.


Livi is big on family and big on road safety. And when he saw the road toll on the news, he knew he had to do something.

The 14-year-old took to Facebook with a photo of himself holding a sign that reads: “There’s been a lot of loss already and the holiday[s] [have] just begun, so I thought I would start a movement called #HomeForDinner to promote safe driving in NZ and to make sure we all make it home for dinner.” 

It created a Facebook storm when he created a hash tag to encourage drivers to be careful. His picture has also been shared on the popular Facebook page Kiwi Az Bro, and has received over 3000 likes and close to 2000 shares. 

“Lately I’ve been hearing stuff on the news about people dying on the roads and so I thought I’d do something about it”.

“So I created a catchy hash tag called ‘home for dinner’ to ensure all New Zealanders had their family home at night for dinner,”  Livi said.

The Hamilton Boys’ High School student said he had lost family members over recent years. “We have lost a couple of people and so that really struck home. We just thought of something that we wanted to share with our family. Just so [they] know we are there for them,” he said.

“I’ve recently got a couple of people saying how grateful they are for the message and how proud they are because they have been in need of comfort as well.”

Livi said he did not expect this new-found fame, but hopes the message makes motorists think twice before speeding. “It was just a couple of tags. [I expected] about 10 shares and 10 likes and I turn around the next hour and it’s got over a thousand.” His message is simple.

“Be safe and love one another on the roads and people want to get home to their families, so why don’t everybody help them out.

 

Can Mumbai shed its reputation as the ‘car crash capital’?

Can Mumbai shed its reputation as the ‘car crash capital’?

One person is killed on Mumbai’s roads every 15 hours. In an attempt to get a grip on the chaos, the police are going digital – recording fines electronically and installing CCTV. But will it stop people taking risks?  WHO estimates 207,551 deaths on the road in 2013 (Global Status Report on Road Safety, 2015) with 16.6 deaths per 100,000 citizens in the country. Compared with European countries such as the UK that currently operates at 2.9 deaths per 100,000 citizens, India still faces a road safety crisis.

For 30 minutes after she was hit, Archana Pandya lay bleeding on a road in the busy Mumbai suburb of Goregaon. The 22-year-old, who had just started a new job, was on her way home from work when she was the victim of a hit-and-run. She died of her injuries. “There were a lot of people there, and it happened right opposite a police station, but no one came forward to help,” says her brother Siddharth Pandya. “It’s not the roads; in India, it’s the people that are unsafe.”

Pandya was one of 586 people killed in road accidents in Mumbai in 2015, the equivalent of one death every 15 hours. Another 2,034 were seriously injured. The long response times of ambulances and emergency vehicles, coupled with the unwillingness of bystanders to help road victims for fear of being detained by police and hospitals, contribute to slow, painful deaths for hundreds of people every year. As a result, Mumbai – a city with roughly the same number of cars as London, but more than four times the number of road fatalities – has become known as India’s “crash capital”. In 2015 there were 23,468 recorded traffic collisions: the highest in the country.

Mumbai has the highest density of cars in India. Photograph: Alamy

The city’s urban geography has helped breed a culture of reckless driving. Cars zigzag through dense traffic jams, cutting lanes, overtaking from the left or zipping past red lights. Drivers know that the penalties are small and the chances of getting caught are low. Many scoff at the idea of wearing a seatbelt, while others casually take phone calls and answer text messages as they navigate through the maze of cars.

These lax attitudes and dangerous driving habits are spawned right from the driving test, which exists mostly as a formality and is easily smoothed with a small bribe. Aditi Deopujari, a Mumbai resident who got her driving licence in 2000, explains: “I was part of a driving school that had a setup with the Motor Vehicles Department [which issues licences]. I showed up and had some practice rounds, but never had to sit the exam or had any written test regarding the rules. I just got handed the licence.” Another resident, who asked to remain anonymous, says: “I literally had to drive five metres forward, and then five metres reverse. That was it, I passed.”

In an attempt to get a grip on the chaos, Milind Bharambe, the head of the traffic police, is presiding over a new traffic control experiment. The city has given all traffic cops electronic devices to issue fines, and has installed 4,000 CCTV cameras at junctions and signals. “After five violations, we are going to start taking away licences,” says Bharambe, whose plan to digitise the traffic control system takes cues from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “digital India” programme.

“Watch,” says police officer Prashant Prabhu, motioning towards a traffic light at a busy junction on the Mumbai marina. Across the road, the light is about to go from green to red. But just as he predicts, cars accelerate through, hoping to cross the signal as the yellow flashes. Some keep driving even after the light goes red.

“Signal jumping is the biggest offence at this junction,” he says. “Everyone thinks, the light has just turned red, let me try to get through. Nobody wants to wait.”

Milind Bharambe in his office

Prabhu jumps out and flags down a motorbike that has just sped through the red light. He asks for the rider’s licence, then pulls out a calculator-like device, and fumbles trying to enter his password into the new machine. Eventually he punches in the licence number and asks for a credit card to pay the 200 rupee (£2.40) fine.

“Sometimes people refuse to give their driving licence. OK, no problem, we just put their licence plate number into the machine, and it will automatically send a fine to their phone,” he says. “This way we have a record of all the traffic offences each driver has committed.”

Until last month, traffic fines for even the most serious errors were issued on paper, with no way to check if a driver was a repeat offender, says Baharambe. “We’ve been running the programme for just one month, and already we’ve given out over 150,000 fines.”

Bharambe seems a credible candidate for the huge task of modernising Mumbai’s archaic traffic policing system. His office walls feature images of the Hindu elephant god Ganesh as well as live streams of CCTV footage from around the city; on his wrist is an Apple watch. He has a black belt in karate, a 10-year winning streak in state-wide shooting competitions, and a solid record as a policeman – his achievements include setting up the rapid response team during the Mumbai terror attacks of 2008. And he has a history of introducing tech-based initiatives as superintendent of police in Sangli and Thane, two cities near Mumbai.

As well as digitising traffic offences, his plan includes the more analogue solution of new hydraulic towing vans, which can move 4x4s – until now, SUVs that had been badly parked or involved in collisions had to be left on the road until their driver moved them. He has also invested in digital signboards to warn about roadworks or accidents. “This is the first time that something like this is being done in the country.”

One floor below Bharambe’s office, Kishore Shinde, the traffic police’s first head of multimedia, is checking on pairs of uniformed police officers – these are the officers tasked with using the new CCTV cameras to issue tickets and fines remotely. Shinde also oversees a new complaints system, which receives more than 300 messages from frustrated drivers every day.

“The biggest issues are traffic jams, no parking, accidents, and oil spills on the road,” he says. “We’re making all the fines cashless, so drivers can pay via credit card or mobile phone. We know there is corruption and bribery even in our own department, like there is from top to bottom everywhere in India. But once you pay by credit card, that means we have a record of the transaction. No police officer can just take a cut for themselves.”

Although digitising Mumbai’s traffic operations is a significant shift that could improve efficiency and reduce corruption, Siddharth Pandya, brother of Archana, doubts it will have much impact on the death toll. “Nothing has changed,” he says. “Many of the CCTVs police installed before are not properly maintained or don’t work, so why would it be different now? Where Archana was killed there was a CCTV camera, but it was broken, so we never found out who hit her.”

Bharambe, for his part, argues that Mumbai’s collision statistics look worse than other Indian cities because the Mumbai police are better at recording accidents. He argues that Delhi has four times as many vehicles as Mumbai but barely records any no-injury accidents, in a deliberate effort to keep crash statistics low. He also points to mismanagement, corruption and red tape within a complex web of urban planning authorities. “We have to keep cleaning up their mess,” he says.

Harish Wahi, director of road safety NGO Equal Streets, thinks that the city’s traffic problems run even deeper.“South Bombay was built in British colonial times, and all of new Bombay has taken shape very quickly, post-1980s. Because of the speed of that growth, the planning and quality of roads has gone. On top of that, pavements are encroached upon by hawkers or shops, so pedestrians have no choice but to walk on busy streets.”

Prabhu, the traffic cop on Mumbai’s marina, says police are blamed unfairly for road deaths. “I am literally on my feet the whole day. I barely sit down. The problem is the public doesn’t want to drive properly – they just want to reach their destination as fast as possible.”

Bharambe admits that his digital drive is only like to reduce deaths by a small fraction. “The people also have to take some responsibility,” he says. “Look, two years ago, none of the people on motorbikes were wearing helmets. Now, since we’ve started enforcing [helmet wearing], you’ll see most of the drivers have their helmets. But you’ll still see men who are driving their motorbikes wearing helmets themselves, but the wife and children sitting behind them are not. Now tell me, if people themselves are taking such risks with their own family’s lives, then what can we do?”

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