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Picking Up Speed
As Cambodia's Traffic Levels
Increase, So Too Does the Road Death Toll
By Matt Reed
and Yun Samean
The Cambodia Daily
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In a country still plagued by poverty, official corruption, political
violence, mob killings and land mines, it is easy to understand why traffic
safety isn't viewed by government and NGO officials as one of the pressing
issues facing Cambodia today.
"Both international organizations and locals, nobody takes this issue
very seriously," said Reuben McCarthy, coordinator of Handicap
International's mines and disability prevention department.
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Phnom Penh commuters make their way through the
intersection of Mao Tse Tung and Monivong Boulevards-one of the city's
busiest-this week
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But that could soon change. An ever-increasing number of cars and
motorcycles, the construction of smoother, faster roads, lax enforcement of
traffic laws, and bold but often uneducated drivers will likely become a
deadly mix in coming years.
While no one doubts that better roads are necessary for Cambodia's progress,
people should also view traffic safety as a major development issue,
according to McCarthy.
"This is already a terrible problem in Vietnam and China," said
David Salter, chief technical adviser at the International Labor
Organization's Phnom Penh office. "For developing countries, it could
mean a drop of one or two percent in annual gross national product."
Prime Minister Hun Sen has said one of his government's top priorities is to
build new roads. Both in the city and the countryside, better roads will
bring an improved standard of living as it becomes cheaper and quicker to
move goods between Phnom Penh, Battambang, Kompong Cham, Koh Kong and Siem
Reap, as well as across borders to Ho Chi Minh City and Bangkok.
But the downside is the number of people who will inevitably be maimed or
killed, which in addition to the sorrow is also a drain on the economy due
to increased health care costs and reduced worker productivity.
Traffic casualties will likely take a large jump in the next year or two as
a government and international donor-sponsored road construction campaign
continues in Phnom Penh and on the national highways, according to Salter.
A 1999 report on rural roads in Cambodia, funded by the Swedish
International Development Cooperation Agency, said poor road conditions have
been keeping the number of traffic deaths down.
"When these roads are rehabilitated...high speeding traffic will create
a much greater danger," the report said. "If the speeds can be
reduced by warning signs and different kinds of traffic calming measures,
the risk for fatal accidents decreases dramatically."
Developing countries in Asia and Africa have witnessed a huge increase in
traffic fatalities as new roads are built. Salter cites the case of one
modern highway built in China. Within months of its opening, thousands of
people were dead from traffic accidents, he said.
About 700,000 people are killed and 10 million are injured every year
worldwide in traffic accidents. Deaths from traffic accidents could be the
third leading cause of death and disability in the world by 2020 if current
trends remain unchanged, according to a 1999 study by the World Health
Organization, World Bank and Harvard University.
Fatality rates are 20 to 30 times higher in developing countries than in
industrialized countries, the study found.
"It is the poor people who are at the greatest exposure. They are
usually in rickety transport and have the least amount of steel around them.
They usually have the least amount of knowledge about traffic laws,"
Salter said.
At the busy Phnom Penh intersection of Norodom, Mao Tse Tung and Sothearos
boulevards, 10 municipal military and traffic police officers work as a team
to try to tame the hectic morning and late afternoon traffic.
After one recent morning on the job, tired traffic police official Mardy
Duch described how police try to keep vehicles from blocking the
intersection, driving in the wrong lane or charging into oncoming traffic
after a stoplight has turned red.
Car and motorcycle drivers regularly ignored traffic lights when 36 signals
were installed throughout the city by the municipality in 1998. While
drivers are now more likely to respect traffic laws, traffic signals and
traffic police, Mardy Duch said he is also seeing more and more accidents at
his intersection.
"There are a lot more cars and motorcycles," he said. "In the
future, I believe there will be even more accidents."
A 2001 study by the Japan International Cooperation Agency estimated there
were approximately 300,000 motorized vehicles in Phnom Penh, a
"remarkable increase" from 1991. A decade ago, as the country
prepared for the arrival of Untac and its fleet of Toyota Land Cruisers,
there were only a handful of automobiles on the city's streets. Even
motorcycles were a rare site.
There were 76 people killed and almost 800 people were hurt in automobile
and motorcycle accidents in Phnom Penh in 2001, according to municipal
traffic police official Chev Hak. The great majority of those accidents
happened on the city's main boulevards and at busy intersections, with
teenagers and young adults the majority of the fatalities.
Those figures which include only those reported to police show a small
improvement from 1999 and 2000. In 1999, 133 died in traffic accidents in
the city. In 2000, the number of fatalities dropped to about 95. But
officials expect these numbers to spike upward.
Because provincial officials do not usually keep data on traffic accidents,
no nationwide statistics are available. But tragic stories regularly make
their way back to the capital:
- Aug 2001: A National Election Committee-owned Land Cruiser slammed
into a group of people at a local market in Kompong Thom province,
killing 15 and injuring 39.
- July 2001: Eleven died and 12 more were injured as an alleged drunk
driver lost control of a taxi full of garment workers and careened off a
bridge into a river outside Phnom Penh.
- Feb 2001: Five died and 57 were hurt along Route 4 in Kompong Speu
province when a driver lost control of his truck.
- Jan 2001: Seven killed and 18 injured along Route 5 in Pursat province
when a taxi blew a tire, struck a pedestrian and flipped over.
- April/May 1999: Seven were killed and 20 were injured in a rash of
accidents along Route 4 in Kompong Speu province. The accidents prompted
officials to call for improved ambulance service.
In Phnom Penh last year, almost every accident was caused by a driver who
had been driving too fast, had been drinking alcohol or abused some other
traffic law, said Chev Hak. Salter estimates that 80 percent of all traffic
accidents can be blamed on driver error.
Government officials have said road deaths will rise because many vehicles
are driven by people who do not understand the traffic laws.
There are eight driving schools in Phnom Penh and several more in
Sihanoukville and Battambang and Kompong Cham provinces. But driver's
education is not required by the government.
In order to obtain a driver's license, a person is required to fill out a
form, take a verbal and driving test and pay a $20 fee, said Ministry of
Public Works and Transportation undersecretary of state Tan Sintho.
"The majority of drivers don't spend time learning. They just go
straight to buy a driver's license," said Mardy Duch.
The government has introduced some measures to address Cambodia's worsening
traffic situation.
In Feb 2001, the city assigned municipal military police to work alongside
traffic police to enforce traffic laws and general security on the streets.
Last December, the Council of Ministers passed a draft law that would
require virtually all motorcycle drivers and passengers to wear helmets.
Front-seat car passengers would have to wear seatbelts, and all drivers
would have to remain sober and refrain from honking their horns wildly.
In recent months, the government has also sponsored television and radio
announcements on traffic safety.
Future publicity campaigns should look to the Cambodian Mine Action Center's
awareness efforts as an example "because there are obvious similarities
in both costs and teaching methods," the 1999 Sida report stated.
Although land mines get more attention from the media, government and
international donors, traffic accidents may already be a larger problem for
Cambodians.
In 2001, there were 797 reported land mine casualties, according to the
Cambodia Mine/UXO Victim Information System. That's close to the same number
of people police said were hurt in traffic accidents in Phnom Penh last
year.
"Traffic is anywhere and everywhere. It can't be fenced off, like land
mines," said Salter.
Last August, Handicap International expanded the focus of its land mines
department to include traffic accidents after surveys done in Cambodia and
around the world found a large percentage of disabilities caused by traffic
accidents, McCarthy said.
Later this month, Handicap International and the government will train 140
motorcycle taxi drivers in a pilot program aimed at promoting road safety.
The taxi drivers will be registered with the municipality and commune
officials and will wear uniformed beige vests and blue helmets.
The NGO is now working to set up a nationwide monitoring system to count the
number of traffic accident victims. The system will use the same staff and
methods that Handicap International uses to count land mine victims, said
McCarthy.
Meanwhile, Cambodia's traffic continues to move, turn and flow in its wild
and frightening way. During January, seven more people died in Phnom Penh
traffic accidents. In February, police said there were 16 fatalities.
The photo credit is Matt
Reed/The Cambodia Daily
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