Opinion
The Menace Of Road Accidents
The rampant cases of road accidents in Nigeria should be a source of worry to ever Nigerian with human heart. From Lagos to Kano, Abuja to Calabar and from Port Harcourt to Benin, the stories are the same and they are pathetic.
The rate at which people die through road accidents create a climate for fear and uncertainty to human existence. Hardly can a day pass without stories of road mishap adorning the pages of various newspapers in the country. One of the reasons for this incessant road mishaps is as a result of poor road network across the country.
The state of roads, especially engaged in the South/East and the South-South zones of Nigeria is pathetic, and thus needs an urgent attention of the Federal Government and the respective states. This is necessary because no nation can boast of even development without good road network.
However, over 90 per cent of accidents on the country’s highways have been attributed to recklessness of untrained and inexperienced drivers, many of whom do not posses even driver’s licence. They are often reckless when driving. Besides, most vehicles that ply our roads are in bad condition. Even at that; they still carry excess luggage. It was also observed that most of the accident were caused by drivers are involved in excessive speed which makes it difficult to control the car under emergency would argue that most of the highways in the country are not wide enough.
The six-lane Eko Bridge is a pride and a sign of sustainable development by any standard in the world. But yet hundreds of our compatriots have been sent to their premature death in that area. Many drivers on our roads are merely licensed criminal officials who for a new Naira will want to give out drivers licences to people who should not be seen near the steering wheels.
The Society of Engineer should be brought engaged in for independent professional advice, alongside the various vehicle inspection authorities in the country should be made to discharge their duties with more honesty and diligence to ensure that there are simply not too many unworthy vehicles plying our roads. Nothing said so far should be taken as exonerating the numerous reckless drivers on our road. The disgrace to humanity is enormous. Police should rise up to their duty. The vehicle drivers should be made to obey the laws to spare human lives.
The federal and state governments too should order a thorough re-examination of the designs, structural and functional qualities of our road signs. Not too long ago a luxurious bus plunged into a river near Kano after take-off from Lagos with about 50 passengers on board who were feared dead. In the same vein, the Choba bridge incident was too bad to forget in a hurry by the Rivers people. It was like a horrifying sight to behold seeing all the passengers on board the car in a pool of blood.
To reduce this carnage on our highways, the Federal Road Safety Commission, the Road Transport Workers Union, the National Union of Road Transport Workers as well as other relevant bodies should intensify effort towards making our roads accident-free. This could be done by reviewing the transport sector in such a way that drivers would be made to undergo compulsory training before being allowed to operate motor vehicle.
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