Business
FRSC Boss Wants Children In Road Safety Clubs
As the world marks the
third United Nations Global Road Safety Week from Monday, parents and guardians have been enjoined to encourage their children and wards to join road safety clubs in their schools in order to get more familiar with road safety requirements.
The Sector Commander, Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Rivers State Command, Mr Sunday Oghenekaro, who made the call in a chat with The Tide in his office in Port Harcourt, yesterday, noted that belonging to such clubs would further enhance their road safety consciousness to and from school daily.
Oghenekaro said as the children and wards go to school daily, the parents should provide child restraints in order to ensure that they are properly secured in the vehicle they entered.
He advised that when parents are walking with their children on the road, they should ensure that the children are held on the left hand off the road to avoid them from having contact with an in-coming vehicles.
The Sector Commander also enjoined parents to guide their children not to run on the path of a vehicle, those under 10 years of age should not be left alone unguided to walk on the pedestrian walk-ways to school, not to allow their children to play around a parked vehicle, children should be taught the road drills of looking left, right and left again to ascertain that the road is clear before they cross the road fast and not diagonally.
According to him, parents and teachers should listen to complaints and observation by children about their school’s bus driver or the family driver who took them to school and back home, as there are some bad drivers who over-speed, use mobile phone while on the steering, lack of concentration and consideration for pedestrians on zebra crossings as well as guide them from playing on the road ways.
On the theme of this year’s week, “Children On Road Safety”, the state FRSC boss said this was very apt because records have it that 30 children of five years of age have road crashes daily while 500 die every day, globally.
He said the safety of children in transit should be a general concern and not for the road safety organisations alone, but that the FRSC, Rivers State command is taking the weeklong campaign of Save Kids’ Lives to all nooks and crannies especially the educating institutions, government, private offices and places of workshop for their collaboration in promoting child safety as well as to test drivers at the various motor parks and terminals of fleet operators on drugs before they embark on any journey.
The weeklong programme will end on May 10, 2015, with a call on all concerned to sign the Child Declaration On Save Kids’ Lives.
Collins Barasimieye
Business
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Business
Senate Orders NAFDAC To Ban Sachet Alcohol Production by December 2025 ………Lawmakers Warn of Health Crisis, Youth Addiction And Social Disorder From Cheap Liquor
The upper chamber’s resolution followed an exhaustive debate on a motion sponsored by Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong (Cross River South), during its sitting, last Thursday.
He warned that another extension would amount to a betrayal of public trust and a violation of Nigeria’s commitment to global health standards.
Ekpenyong said, “The harmful practice of putting alcohol in sachets makes it as easy to consume as sweets, even for children.
“It promotes addiction, impairs cognitive and psychomotor development and contributes to domestic violence, road accidents and other social vices.”
Senator Anthony Ani (Ebonyi South) said sachet-packaged alcohol had become a menace in communities and schools.
“These drinks are cheap, potent and easily accessible to minors. Every day we delay this ban, we endanger our children and destroy more futures,” he said.
Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, who presided over the session, ruled in favour of the motion after what he described as a “sober and urgent debate”.
Akpabio said “Any motion that concerns saving lives is urgent. If we don’t stop this extension, more Nigerians, especially the youth, will continue to be harmed. The Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has spoken: by December 2025, sachet alcohol must become history.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
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