IT'S OFFICIAL: KENYANS
ARE WORST DRIVERS ...
KENYA RECORDS HIGHEST ROAD
ACCIDENT RATE IN EAST AFRICA
DAR ES SALAAM, (Xinhua) -- Kenya has the highest rate of road accidents in East Africa, according to statistics released from a regional road safety conference held here.
Kenya has over 3,000 deaths linked with road accidents, followed by Tanzania with 2,905 deaths and Uganda which recorded 2, 334 deaths last year, the local newspaper the African reported on Thursday.
Most of the road accidents in Kenya occur because most drivers do not have valid driving licenses, Kenyan Minister of Transport Chirau Mwakwere was quoted as saying during the "Make Roads Safe" Conference.
For his part, Tanzanian Minister for Infrastructure Development Shukuru Kawambwa noted that last year his country recorded 20,615 road accidents, an increase from 17,677 recorded in the previous year, while the deaths marked an increase of 12 percent over the deaths which occurred on Tanzanian roads in 2007.
He called for more efforts and actions as it is important to collaborate to instigate a decade of actions for road safety.
For Uganda , the eastern African country had undertaken short, medium and long-term measures to reduce accidents on Uganda roads through public awareness, engineering and enforcement, according to Ugandan Minister for Transport John Nsasira.
The Ugandan government will also spend 15 percent of the national budget between 2008 and 2011 each year on upgrading and maintenance of the road network, which carries 90 percent of the country's passenger and freight transport, he added.
At the continent level, Africa 's road deaths are currently over 200,000 a year and are predicted to rise by at least 80 percent by 2020, while by 2015, road crashes will be the No.1 killer of children aged five to 14 years, outstripping malaria and HIV/AIDS, the statistics showed.
Transport ministers from several African countries, including South Africa , were attending the four-day conference on July 7-10, which aims to discuss safety targets to reduce accident fatalities by half by 2015, according to the report.
Co-hosted by Federation International Automobile (FIA) Foundation, FIA African Council for Touring and Automobile, as well as the UN Economic Commission for Africa, the conference also serves as a curtain raiser to the global United Nations Transport Ministers Conference on Road Safety in Moscow in November 2009.