FRIDAY, April 26, 2024
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Govt braces for New Year road accidents

Govt braces for New Year road accidents

Authorities increase road safety efforts as millions head home for the holiday.

AS MANY holidaymakers started their journeys to hometowns along congested highways across the country yesterday, Interior Minister Anupong Paochinda presided over the launch of a road-safety centre in Bangkok that aims to solve traffic problems and prevent road fatalities during the New Year holiday period. 
Anupong instructed the centre, operating under the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department, to intensify operations in collaboration with related agencies, the general public and the private sector under the government’s Pracharat, or “state of the people”, model that aims to reduce factors contributing to road accidents from yesterday to Wednesday. 
He urged local administrative organisations to repair roadways that are known to be accident-prone. Officials were also told to ensure public transport buses and vans were safe. 
Provinces and local agencies were told to strictly enforce traffic laws, set up road checkpoints to arrest drunk drivers and speeding motorists, and arrange pit stops for drivers on long trips, he said. 
Provinces with water attractions or with rivers or canals were to ensure safety at piers and in public transport boats, he added.
The New Year 2016 holiday period saw 3,379 road accidents that killed 380 people and injured 3,505, compared to the previous period’s 2,997 accidents with 341 deaths and 3,117 injuries. The main causes of accidents were drunk driving (26 per cent) and speeding (17 per cent).
During the New Year 2016 holiday period, Chiang Mai province had the most accidents and the highest number of injuries while Nakhon Ratchasima saw the most deaths. 
A 20-kilometre-long stretch of highway in Khao Chong Tako in Sa Kaew’s Ta Phraya district was congested from about 1am to 4am yesterday, as people travelled to the lower Northeast region. Police, the Army and local administrators set up checkpoints and pit stops along the route. 
A similar traffic jam was expected throughout the day, with officers dispatched to aid the flow of traffic and to warn motorists to follow traffic laws.
Similar conditions were reported on Mitraparp Highway in Nakhon Ratchasima province, known as a gateway to Northeast. A special lane was added to a 20km-long section of the highway from Sara Buri’s Khaeng Khoi district to Nakhon Ratchasima’s Pak Chong district and another at a 7km-long section in Muang Nakhon Ratchasima. Highway No 304 in Prachin Buri’s Kabin Buri district was also congested.
For those travelling by car or bus to hometowns in the North, the Asia Highway in Phichit province has had a high volume of vehicles.
Meanwhile, city police chief Lt-General Sanit Mahathaworn asked for cooperation from truck associations not to operate on Bangkok roads today and Tuesday to allow smoother traffic flows for holidaymakers, said acting deputy chief Maj-General Jirapat Bhumijit.
He asked people who spotted trucks on Bangkok roads on those two days to alert police by the hotline number 1197 so police could notify truck associations. The Highway Police may ask for a similar cooperation nationwide, he added.
In Pathum Thani’s Sam Khok district, vocational students are providing a free car and motorbike repair and maintenance service to holidaymakers until Wednesday at the Cosmo Oil gas station on Kanchanapisek 9 western ring road heading towards Ayutthaya’s Bang Pa-in district.
Pathum Thani Technical College director Kwanchai Panichakan said students wearing orange vests would also provide free services at pit stops on the highway in the province.
In a related development, Immigration Police chief Lt-General Natthorn Phrosunthorn and Don Mueang Airport director Phet Chan-charoen presided over a ceremony at the airport yesterday to dispatch officers to accommodate and to provide security to tourists during the holiday period. 

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