Accra Launches Road Safety Strategy

Mohammed Adjei Sowah, AMA Boss

Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) has launched its first ever Road Safety Strategy as part of efforts to reduce road traffic deaths and injuries in the city.

The 12-year strategy – spanning from 2018 to 2030 – was developed in collaboration with Bloomberg Philanthropies Initiative for Global Road Safety (BIGRS) and SSATP African Transport Policy Programme.

The Mayor of Accra, Mohammed Adjei Sowah, who launched the strategy, said the AMA recognizes that road crashes remain one of the major causes of deaths and serious injuries around the world, hence the efforts put in place by AMA-BIGRS in making the roads in the city safe.

He said the strategy hopes to reduce road  fatalities in the city to less than 125 per annum, achieve less than six fatalities per 100,000 population, reduce serious injuries to less than 375  per annum as well as minimize  pedestrian fatalities and serious injuries to less than 350 per annum.

The mayor noted that some critical issues identified in this strategy included governance and ownership of road safety, legal framework for road safety, design and function of roads, land use, planning, and priorities, non-compliance with traffic rules by motorcyclists, driver testing, licensing and behaviour of private and commercial drivers, as well as post-crash emergency response and care.

He gave an assurance that the AMA was determined to see the strategy through, and was putting governance arrangements in place to support its agenda, adding that the strategy had come to complement the massive drive by the city authority to reduce road fatalities and injuries.

“We will see to the establishment of an Accra Road Safety Council which will be chaired by me. It will be backed up by a management group and a professional secretariat. An Annual Road Safety Plan will also be prepared, identifying the road safety commitments of constituent agencies, and we will publish an Annual Road Safety Report. The AMA shall further commission a Road Safety Investment Plan that identifies the need within the city of Accra,” he said.

Mr. Sowah affirmed the Assembly’s unflinching commitment to the safety of city dwellers and called on all institutions and citizens to collaborate with the Assembly to deal with the carnage on our roads.

“Consider what you, your school, your workplace and your community can do to help the relevant stakeholders in the tackling of this crisis. We must all contribute if we are to reach our goal of a safe Accra,” he pointed out.

On his part, Martins Small, the lead consultant for SSATP, indicated that road safety challenges were a trauma around the world, hence the vision of a strategy to make Accra a safe city free from road traffic deaths and serious injuries.

The AMA-BIGRS initiative coordinator, Osei Kufuor, also revealed that the initiative since 2015 had yielded positive results but was quick to add that there was more room for improvement to reduce fatalities and injuries.

“We have been able to construct 400 meters of pedestrian walkways, recovered 34km of pedestrian sidewalks, built 11 speed humps at selected locations and marked 20 new pedestrian crossings across the city of Accra. The AMA-BIGRS collaboration had helped build the capacity of 90 road safety practitioners on the International Road Assessment Programme  (iRAP), 333 police personnel and metro guards, 40 journalists, six city staff graduates and had set up a data unit in the AMA to effectively inform decisions,” he disclosed.

On their parts, Tawia Addo-Ashong, lead consultant for World Bank and Alhaji Iddrisu Fuseini, Deputy Director, Vehicle Inspection and Registration at DVLA, expressed their commitment to work towards the realisation of the strategy.

 

 

 

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