7 December 2018
Earlier today, the World Health Organization (WHO) released the
Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018.
According to the report: relative to the world’s population size, road
death rates have remained fairly constant. Yet the overall number of
people killed by road traffic crashes each year has increased to 1.35
million―equivalent to one death every 24 seconds. While some reductions
in road deaths have been seen among high- and middle-income countries,
no low-income country has reduced road deaths since the last report in
2015. The risk of dying on the road is three times higher for those
living in low-income countries than in high-income countries.
Lotte Brondum, Executive Director at the Global Alliance of NGOs for
Road Safety (the Alliance), gave her reaction to the report’s findings:
“Analysis of the
Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018 is
bleak: it shows a picture of inertia, where a massive public health
crisis is happening right now in front of our eyes, and yet governments
stand passively aside as people continue to die on the roads. This
crisis is not just about the numbers, it is personal—1.35 million
fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers, sons, and daughters lost through
preventable tragedies.
“The report shows starkly that the global commitments made by UN Member
States to reduce road deaths and injuries by 50% by 2020 have not
translated into necessary action. The burden continues to fall on the
poorest nations and, despite pockets of progress, real change has not
been seen. Road traffic injuries are now the eighth leading cause of
death globally, up from ninth in 2015, and the number one killer of
five-to-29-year-olds. Road deaths exceed those of HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, and diarrhoeal diseases, yet financial investment is a
fraction of that invested in these diseases. Real change can only happen
if political will and financial commitment are activated—if our
decision makers are shocked into action. We must use this report as a
wake-up call.
“We call for governments to commit themselves to policy change that puts
road users, especially pedestrians and cyclists, at the center;
stronger enforcement of traffic laws; funding that meets the severity of
the road crisis; and the involvement of NGOs and other stakeholders in
collaborations that harness the unique expertise of different partners.
“We call on NGOs around the world to raise their voices and the voices
of their communities, families, and victims; to hold their governments
accountable for promises made; and to cast a spotlight that cannot be
ignored on these global and national statistics. We must use the
report as the valuable tool that it is.
“We also call on all stakeholders, including governments and NGOs, to
look ahead: the Third Ministerial Conference on Road Safety will be held
in Sweden in 2020, and the global goals will be scrutinized and
renegotiated. It is essential that national governments take part in and
commit to this debate and that NGOs lend them their support and
expertise in preparation.”
Read the full
Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018 HERE.
Read WHO’s press release on the launch of the
Global Status Report on Road Safety 2018 HERE.
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