Nigeria: Driving to death
One of the most dangerous things anyone can do in Nigeria is get into a car. "Remember that every road user is mad,"
reads a hand out from the Nigerian NGO, Volunteers from Safety Alliance. "You are the only sane one."
With the oil boom in the 1970s the government built many expressways but didn't maintain them. Gapping potholes suddenly
appear on modern-looking roadways around the country. Worse yet: Nigerians drive astonishingly fast, and often with
little or no training.
It is not just that there are more accidents in Nigeria; it is that the accidents are more deadly. Officially around 50
percent were fatal in 2006, and that figure has been much higher in other years. Serious injuries are even more common.
Out of the 9,114 reported accidents in 2006, 17,390 people wound up in hospital.
At the national hospital in Abuja, trauma surgeon Oluwole Olaomi told IRIN that out of the 703 patients he treated in
the month of August, 114 were road accident victims, most between the ages of 20 and 40 years old.
Nigeria is undergoing a "road crisis," but it is not being widely discussed. Officially only about 400 people die on the
Nigerian roads each month, according to the head of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in Abuja, Osita Chidoka,
but many deaths are never registered.
"The number of people killed and injured in road crashes is widely thought to be much higher," Chude Ojugbona of Prompt
Assistance to Victims of Road Accidents, an international NGO that operates in Lagos, told IRIN. He said rural road
accidents are often not counted, nor are people who die of their injuries in hospitals.
What to do
The percentage of people that die from road accidents is high all across Africa even though the continent has one of the
lowest vehicle per capita ratios in the world. An estimated 28.2 Africans are killed by cars per 100,000 according to
the World Health Organization (WHO) and by 2010, 11 percent of global fatalities from driving will occur in Africa.
Part of the problem is that many vehicles are not roadworthy. "There is a lack of competent mechanics," the president of
the Driver's Welfare Club of Nigeria, Comrade Monday Eligimbe, told IRIN. "But remember: no mechanic will tell you he
doesn't know how to fix something."
Yet even more dangerous than the vehicles are the drivers. "The majority of accidents are due to carelessness," says
Isiah Ogacheko, Program Coordinator of Safety Alliance.
According to government figures, 47 percent of all accidents in 2001 were caused by speeding and another 37 percent by
dangerous driving.
Drivers go through little or no training before they receive their licenses. Fake licenses are widely available for
around $40. "Being on the road with a driver's license [and no training] is a license to kill," Chidoka said.
Nigerian drivers often dart across traffic lanes and speed through intersections in a way that foreigners find suicidal.
"It is a lifestyle thing," says Isiah Ogacheko of Safety Alliance.
Safety
Both the government and NGOs have a goal of cutting the accident rate by half. Better policing is the answer, says the
road safety commission. It says that currently Nigeria only has enough traffic police to cover 12.5 percent of the
nation's roads and those that are there have reputation fro taking petty bribes rather than prosecuting traffic
offenders.
NGOs are providing driver education courses and the commission says it plans do the same. It has already begun giving
cars free safety checks, with police trained to look at car safety and offer free advice on emergency preparedness. "The
whole idea is to cause an internal change of culture here," Osita Chidoka told IRIN.
But in the coming weeks the statistics are unlikely to improve. At the end of year most people will go back to their
homes and villages by road, Bo Oyeyemi of the FRSC told IRIN. "This is the period for more accidents," he said.
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