PRESS RELEASE: Alliance Advocate Program Extends to Asia
Press Release: Alliance Advocates Asia
PRESS RELEASE: ALLIANCE ADVOCATE PROGRAM EXTENDS TO ASIA
27 November 2018, New Delhi, India
Yesterday 21 grassroots road safety NGO leaders from eight countries in
Asia became the newest cohort of trainees to join the Alliance Advocates
Program, a growing movement of NGOs that is championing a low-cost,
evidence-based approach to road safety.
It is the first time that the Alliance Advocate training, organized by
the Global Alliance of NGOs for Road Safety (the Alliance), has been run
in Asia.
The trainees, known as Alliance Advocates, will strengthen their data,
project management, and advocacy skills through a practical, innovative
demonstration project. Today they collected road data around a school in
suburban New Delhi — using the International Road Assessment Programme
(iRAP)’s Star Rating for Schools methodology — which they will use to
identify actions that would radically improve student safety, and create
an advocacy plan. On Thursday, they will present their plan to decision
makers, including representatives from India’s Ministry of Road
Transportation and Highways (MoRTH), local traffic police, and the World
Health Organization (WHO). This will give them firsthand experience of
presenting their case to those responsible for safer roads.
At the end of the training, the Alliance Advocates will take what they
have learned and replicate the project in their own communities. We
anticipate that at least 21 schools will have been assessed across Asia
by April 2019 and that the Alliance Advocates will work with schools and
local governments to extend the project across their cities. This
approach could transform school journeys for millions of children who
risk their lives every day to attend school along dangerous roads.
Since the program’s inception in 2015, 49 Alliance Advocates have been
trained; successes achieved as a result of the training include
reactivation of seat belt legislation in Tunisia (leading to a 35%
reduction in road deaths in the first month), multi-sectoral
partnerships, and award-winning media campaigns. The safe school element
of the training was introduced in March 2018, and so far 18 schools in
13 countries across Africa have been assessed, with infrastructure
implemented at a school in Mozambique; decision makers in Nairobi,
Kenya, committed to implementing recommended changes; and national
governments in several countries are showing interest.
Ms. Lotte Brondum, Executive Director of the Alliance, said: “Children
in some parts of Asia are risking their lives every day on the way to
school and back. The Alliance Advocates will implement realistic and
effective action plans so that children don’t have to risk their lives
to get an education. We encourage their governments to allow them to
share their new knowledge and to work together with them to make schools
across Asia safer.”
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