Dipak K Dash, TNN Feb 24, 2012, 03.32AM IST
NEW
DELHI : India loses $20 billion due to road accidents annually, which the World
Health Organization (WHO) estimates is enough to feed 50% of the nation's
malnourished children. Officially, at least 1.34 lakh people died on Indian
roads in 2010, while experts claim the figure could be about 1.5 lakh
considering the under reporting of such cases.
WHO
representative in India Dr
Nata Menabde while addressing international road safety experts, including the
senior IPS officers at a convention held at College of Traffic Management (CTM)
in Faridabad ,
said that there is a dire need to save the vulnerable road users to reduce the
huge annual financial loss. She urged that strategies have to be devised to
save lives, particularly pedestrians, cyclists and two-wheeler riders besides
putting curbs on drunk driving and stricter enforcement of wearing of helmets
and seat belts.
"We need to
see how we build our road, investigate properly how accidents occur and police
probe these cases. There should be one group or body that should bring all
sectors together, and it should announce a plan to reduce fatalities,"
Menabde said.
Highlighting how road accidents and fatalities have never grabbed
attention, ex-home secretary G K PIllai said while 2,000 people dying annually
in terrorist acts become a national issue, 1.34 lakh road fatalities have never
been highlighted.
International
experts felt that the high use of cellphones while driving is increasing the
chance of accidents globally. "The chance of accidents increase four-fold in
such cases," said Adam Briggs, former chief constable of the UK.
CTM president
Rohit Baluja said that to reduce the accidents and fatalities on Indian roads,
there is a need to have proper probe to unearth the cause of accidents.
"The government data claims that only 1% of the deaths are caused due to
faulty roads, which is unacceptable. When you have wrong data, how can you
prepare an action plan to fix the problems? How many engineers have been jailed
for any accident?" he asked.
Even senior
traffic officials from Mumbai, Chennai, Bangalore ,
Haryana, Rajasthan admitted that the investigators looking into accident cases
have little training to probe them. "The usual course of investigation is
on predictable lines: bigger vehicle is the culprit, dead is the victim and
alive is the accused. We need to find the reasons behind such accidents as it
is done in other countries," said Vivek Phansalkar, joint commissioner of
Mumbai Traffic Police.
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