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Why would a motor vehicle
driver booked by road marshals and whose driver or vehicle license has been
seized abandon the document thereafter? This is a problem that has overwhelmed
the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) because the commission tends to focus
on the effect rather the cause. The cause, simply put, is that the absence of a
Unified Licensing Scheme (ULS) and National Vehicles Identification Scheme
(NVIS) enables just about anyone to obtain a drivers license or set of vehicle
documents. Also, the delays and rigmarole that make payment of FRSC fines an
excruciating exercise at most FRSC commands encourages abandonment. A traffic
offender whose papers have been seized is required to go to the office of the
FRSC in the area where he was booked, obtain a bank teller, trace the
designated bank, pay the fine and come back to the FRSC office with the teller
before his seized documents can be released to him. For someone travelling
across geo - political zones, this translates into great costs in time, money
and energy far beyond the contemplation of the law.
But why is it that of all
the duties vested in the FRSC by law, the one that its officers and men are
seen to play with any frequency is that of mounting check points at obscure
locations? Why should it be a principal occupation of FRSC men to stand in
lonely spots and risk their lives stopping fast moving vehicles in the name of
checking fire extinguishers and vehicle documents? Why does the FRSC enjoy
booking road users and issuing tickets even in cases where a verbal caution
would be sufficient? If the idea is to generate more revenue, then it is wrong
because the FRSC, strictly speaking, is not a revenue generating body.
All over the world, the
focus of road safety is how to reduce road carnage and make public roads safer
for road users. This concern underlies the serious implications which, research
and statistics show, road accidents have in social, health and economic terms.
Recent studies even suggest that road accidents are the second most common
cause of death for economically active people in many countries: the World
Health Organization (WHO) estimates that up to 200 people are killed each year
for each million inhabitants. For a country like Nigeria
with a population of about 140 million, this immediately adds up to 28,000
fatalities per annum. But FRSC estimates put the monthly casualty figure
recorded in Nigeria
at 500 fatalities which adds up to 6000 fatalities per year a figure FRSC
helmsman, Osita Chidoka, described as a national scandal. Given the spate of
reported (and largely unreported) road disasters that frequently occur in Nigeria,
these figures seem like a gross underestimation.
Still, while the developed
countries have in general succeeded in minimizing their annual road fatality
index with such countries as Sweden
already contemplating zero option (meaning that no serious injuries or
fatalities are to be tolerated) as an official policy, Nigeria
is still unable to guarantee the safety of road users. In general, our roads
are prone to high fatalities, poor maintenance, inadequate patrols and delayed
road emergency response. While the number of vehicles and motorcycles keep
growing astronomically, there is no commensurate growth in statistical surveys,
driver education, personnel training or traffic safety orientation. The
reason, of course, is that our road safety funding is still borne principally
by government unlike what obtains in other countries.
The FRSC Act s.9 (a) and
(b) provide that the funds of the commission shall consist of allocations by
the Federal Government as well as any other sum which may become payable to
or vest in the commission. If the FRSC does not receive enough fiscal
provision to enable it fulfill its statutory functions, innovative thinking
should be directed at finding new ways of ensuring that the annual fiscal needs
of the commission are met. The Third African Road Safety Congress held in Pretoria,
South Africa
(April 14-17, 1997) addressed the problem of Financing of Road Safety Actions
and concluded that more and more African countries are recognising road safety
as an economic rather than a social service. Current thinking on this subject
is that road safety is a collective responsibility.
Whereas the Government is
ultimately responsible for road safety policies, it is the duty of road users
and stakeholders to bear the cost of operations required to lower the risk of
crashes, personal and fatalities. From the experience of other countries,
available options include the introduction of a Road Safety Tariff, an annual
levy to be imposed in a graduated scale on motorcycles, cars, buses, trucks,
and heavy duty vehicles; or a Road Safety Levy, a periodic toll payable by the
owner of a valid driving license without which he cannot operate a motor
vehicle or motorcycle and/or renew his driving license. More importantly,
funding of road safety operations in many countries is hinged on Compulsory
Vehicle Insurance Return - a deduction made by every insurance company on
premiums on third party and comprehensive policies sold each year. Many
countries have introduced laws for insurers of compulsory third party injury
liability to invest in road safety. In Nigeria,
no such law exists. Still, men of the FRSC risk their lives on the highways
checking vehicle particulars chief among which is the certificate of
insurance!
The FRSC should learn to
put its mouth where its heart is. If the mission of FRSC is to ensure safety
on the highways, it must achieve fiscal independence but not by harassment of
road users. Again, a strategy to ensure rapid emergency response with a target
to achieve the Golden Hour (rescue of road accident victims within one
hour of occurrence) on federal highways and Minus 30 (rescue in less
than 30 minutes ) on public roads must be put in place. This will improve
survival rate by up to 80%.
Back to the Yorkshire
Ripper: Gerry Brown recounts in her book The Worlds Greatest Mysteries that
at the local police station to which he was taken, Peter Sutcliffe gave no hint
that he was a murderer. While he was being routinely questioned about possible
vehicle licensing offences, one of the traffic officers who had arrested him
remembered that he had allowed Sutcliffe get out of his car and urinate out of
sight in the shadows, behind a roadside fuel tank. He returned to the scene and
found a blood-stained hammer in the shadows where Sutcliffe had relieved
himself. When the officer brought the evidence back to the police station,
Sutcliffe quietly began to confess. The Yorkshire Ripper was unmasked not by
crack detectives but by the intuition of a suspicious patrolman and the
availability of a vehicle registration digital databank. uchebush@yahoo.com; 0805 1090 050

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Posted by Robot| 20.04.2008 15:38