The Federal
Road Safety Corps (FRSC) has urged state governments that are yet to establish
their traffic management agencies to do so in line with the Nigeria Road
Safety
Strategy (NRSS).
Corps
Marshal Boboye Oyeyemi, made the call at a meeting with heads of some state
traffic management agencies and zonal commanders of the FRSC in Abuja yesterday
where he addressed newsmen on the sidelines of the meeting, Oyeyemi said state
traffic management agencies were critical to the attainment of the NRSS
objectives.
Implementation
of the NRSS, which targets a 35-percent reduction in road traffic accidents in
the country by 2018, is hinged on the synergy between the federal and state
governments. Besides, Oyeyemi said statistics had shown that states with
traffic management agencies had better road safety records than those without.
“Currently,
we have 18 state traffic management agencies, and from our data, we have seen
that the rate of crashes is trending down in states that already have. This
shows that traffic is being effectively managed in those states. But in states
that have yet to establish their agencies, the rate is going up. This
underscores the need for us to encourage state governments that have yet to
respond to do so in line with our road safety strategy document,” he said.
He listed
the compliant states as Kaduna, Kano, Lagos, Ogun, Delta, Anambra, Cross River,
Kwara, Ekiti, Abia, Imo, Sokoto, Zamfara, Osun, Ondo, Oyo, Rivers and Niger.
Data released at the meeting showed that in 2014, a total of 6,102 road
accidents were recorded in states without traffic agencies compared to 4,278 in
states operating the system. In the same year, 3,049 persons died in road
accidents in the former set of states, while 2,947 died in the latter.
Oyeyemi
added, “Once you have the state traffic management agencies, the FRSC will pull
out from state roads and focus on federal roads, then regulate what the states
are doing which is the ultimate.”
The meeting
was a followup on a two-day capacity building workshop by the United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) for the traffic managers in Abuja
between Tuesday and Wednesday. It focused on the harmonisation of federal and
state road safety operations in the areas of data collection and reporting,
staff training, road signages, computerised vehicle testing, among others.
Some of the
state representatives commended the FRSC for its relentless efforts in reducing
road carnage in the country and promised to implement the resolutions of the
meeting in their states. The Director-General of the Delta State Traffic
Management Authority, Mr Stephen Dieseruvwie, said the initiative would
engender harmony in the policies and operations of FRSC and state traffic
agencies.
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