By Wassim Mroueh
BEIRUT: More than a year after radar
speed traps were installed across the country, the number of deaths from car
accidents has barely changed, a fact road safety groups blame on a failure by
authorities to implement the law.
Speed traps began operating in
November 2010, and according to Internal Security Forces statistics obtained by
The Daily Star, the following year saw a slight drop in the total number of
road accidents – from 4,038 to 3,817.
However, the number of fatalities
was nearly unchanged, with 327 killed and 3,809 injured between November 2010
and the end of October 2011, compared with 330 deaths and 4,223 injuries in the
same period of the previous year.
Between November 2008 and the end of
October 2009, there were 4,531 traffic accidents, claiming the lives of 347
people and injuring 4,922.
But Lina Gebran of the
nongovernmental road safety organization Kunhadi says Lebanese Red Cross
statistics show that car accidents decreased significantly in the first few
months after the speed traps were installed.
In January 2011, accidents dropped
by around 28 percent in comparison to January 2010. Then, they dropped by 18
percent in February, 1.16 percent in April, and then rose again – with an
approximate 20-percent increase in July and a 40-percent increase in December.
“This indicates that authorities
became less strict in the implementation of the law later in the year,” argues
Gebran. “They [ISF] say that radars are still operating. I can’t check this,
but I can read these numbers [which suggest that they’re being less strict].”
Gebran argues that the initial
decrease in accidents, followed by 2011’s increase, kept the number of deaths
nearly constant between the year the speed traps were installed and the
previous year.
Joe Daccache, from the road safety
organization YASA, agrees with Gebran about the initial drop in accidents.
Quoting sources from a Dora hospital, he notes that between November 2010 and
March 2011, deaths and severe injuries from speeding-related accidents dropped
by around 25 percent.
He argues Lebanese have acquired
what he calls an “immunity” against speeding tickets, overlooking the fixed
value of LL50,000 that Daccache labels “unserious.”
Daccache explains that casualties
rose in March, as drivers became undeterred by the LL50,000 ticket.
As he explains the thought process
to The Daily Star, a person will say “I am in a hurry, and so I will not drive
slower than 100 kilometers per hour. I make $100 a day, and so [it’s not a
problem if] I pay LL 50,000 [in order to] arrive at work on time.”
Daccache notes that a progressive
fine and stricter measures are set to be implemented in line with the new
traffic law which is being studied by Parliament’s Public Works, Transport,
Energy and Water Committee. He says 420 items have been passed in the law and
two only are still being studied.
“There is an item which calls for
granting the judge the power to decide on the value of the traffic violation
fine ... The fine decided upon by the judge should have a determined minimum
value which is much more than the current one and which is a deterrent.”
Between Nov. 8, 2010 and Jan. 31,
2011, speed traps recorded 388,628 violations. That brings the total LL50,000
fines to around LL19,431,400,000 ($13.6 million), the bulk of which is
channeled to the Finance Ministry, according to an ISF source, who said that a
small chunk is used to finance ISF equipment and to feed their pension fund.
Gebran argues that a LL50,000 fine
is “is still painful these days.” However, she maintains that because a
violator receives his or her fine “five or six months” after committing the
violation, it is easier to ignore the repercussions of speeding.
She believes a speeder should be
“humiliated” if they are to change their behavior. At present, violators are
informed of their fine through the Liban Post and can check the ISF website,
www.isf.gov.lb, to see if they have any violations. Gebran argues this is not a
strict enough measure.
“Long ago, the police used to
confiscate the driving license of the violator who had to pay the fine before
getting back his driver license,” she explains. “All we are demanding is a
strict implementation of the law,” Gebran stresses.
Evading fine payments can lead to
additional fines, and can eventually lead to arrest if evasion continues.
For his part, Daccache touches on
the insufficient number of traps in use. He says there are between 12 to 15
mobile radar guns currently operating, a number he says is “not enough.” Fixed
radar units are not yet in operation.
Another ISF source told The Daily
Star that speed traps have partially fulfilled their mission, but acknowledged
that more radar guns should be used.
“We would like there to be zero
accidents ... but we see the radar guns as partially useful, given that the
number of deaths from car accidents did not increase compared to the previous
year,” the source said.
The ISF source agreed that there should be more
speed traps in Lebanon, adding that mobile radar guns are more effective since
drivers find them difficult to locate. The source added that fixed radar guns
would be put in place in the near future.http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Feb-21/164046-radar-speed-traps-fail-to-curb-fatalities-ngos.ashx#axzz1n0z4CCop
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