Road Accidents Surge In Nigeria Despite FRSC Efforts
Figures from the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and international groups such as the World Bank and World Health Organisation (WHO) have shown that there has been a surge in roadside accidents in Nigeria over the last six years.
This is coming despite efforts by government interventionist agencies, including the FRSC set up to address the menace of road crashes in the country.
The Nigeria Auto Journal published by the Nigeria Auto Journalists Association revealed this in its latest edition released this month (February 2023).
In the story titled, ‘High Road Crashes, Burden of a Nation’, the World Health Organisation puts the number of people killed yearly via road accidents in Nigeria at 41,693, which is 2.82 percent of the global total.
The World Bank reported that 30,800 deaths are recorded on Nigerian roads annually.
The report read in part, “Local statistics show a total of 32,617 people died in 65,053 on Nigerian roads from 2016 to 2021, as revealed by Mr. Ayobami Omiyale, a retired assistant corps marshal of the FRSC, at a recent retreat by the commission in Lagos.
“Quoting from the FRSC official statistics, he said 5,053 lives were lost in 2016, while 5,121 and 5,181 lives were cut short in 2017 and 2018 respectively. In 2019 and 2020, about 5,483 and 5,574 lives were also lost respectively while 6,205 lives got perished in 2021.
“The National Bureau of Statistics, relying on the FRSC data, revealed that 1,834 people died in 3,345 road accidents in the country between January and March 2022.”
Although the figures from the international groups may be higher than those provided by the FRSC, the latter puts the daily average of road accidents in Nigeria at 36 with high casualties.
Chief Executive Officer of Safety Beyond Borders, Mr. Patrick Adenusi, explained that many road accidents recorded at night, especially in northern Nigeria, are rarely reported.
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The FRSC Corps Marshal Dauda Biu attributed a recent Ojuelegba Bridge accident in Lagos to wrongful overtaking and excessive speeding by the truck driver. Nine people including two children died in the crash in which a truck carrying a container fell on a commercial bus.
The FRSC and NBS also listed factors responsible for the crashes as light/sign violations, dangerous driving and tyre burst, brake failures, route violation, and bad roads.
Segun Ogungbemide, Lagos Sector Commander of the FRSC, tried to exonerate the corps from the rising road traffic crashes, saying they only have the capacity to address only 16 percent of the problem: “The one that will give more impact is to keep policies and regulations in place to prevent the crashes from happening.”
But the report notes that road marshals, vehicle inspection officers (VIOs), highway police as well as state traffic law enforcers are no longer as effective as they used to be.
Many safety campaigns and strategies by the FRSC to curtail road crashes have either disappeared or been played down.
Some of them are the installation of speed limiter in vehicles; use of seat belts; crash helmets; the use of alcolyzer and radar guns to know the drunk driver and over-speeding drivers respectively.
Analysts also accused the officials of the agency of placing emphasis on gratification and revenue generation at the expense of safety.
Before things started going bad, many road safety enlightenment campaigns and enforcement had been embarked upon by the FRSC and relevant agencies across the country. Some of them are operational use of safety belts, installation of speed limiters in vehicles, use of crash helmets by every motorcycle rider and passenger, compulsory psychiatric test for driving against traffic (one-way driving), arrest of drivers using phones while driving and don’t drink while driving.
In the report, the different strategies and facilities used during enforcement such as alcolyzer and radar gun were mentioned but it was regrettably noted that they had all disappeared.