A wrecked car stood at the front of the stage of the World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims Walk and Ride event yesterday at the Queen’s Park Savannah.
Just behind the caution tape, a man comforted a woman who was crying. The mere sight of the vehicle brought back memories of a loved one who had been lost to this damning statistic. This year has seen an increase of nine per cent in road traffic fatalities and it has officials concerned as the country inches closer to Christmas.
The rise in fatalities comes after a decade which saw Trinidad and Tobago as the only country in the Caribbean region and western hemisphere to have achieved a 50 per cent reduction in road traffic deaths between 2011 and 2020.
Scores of walkers and riders showed up yesterday morning for the annual event which started 30 years ago. Among them, were family members of road fatality victims, many of whom carried banners with the faces of their late loved ones. Others wore jerseys printed with images of those they lost.
Minister in the Ministry of Works and Transport, Richie Sookhai, was in attendance, announcing during his speech that those seeking provisional licenses would now be able to apply online.
It’s a move the president of Arrive Alive, Sharon Inglefield, supports. She told Guardian Media, “We want to see that happen ASAP. We want to see more education in the schools. We want to see the police out there enforcing the speed limit, the speed limit in particular around the Savannah, our highways and our main roads. Speed is the number one killer.”
Sookhai said through the work of the recently reconstituted National Road Safety Council spearheaded by the Ministry of Works and Transport, in 2024 considerable attention will be placed on the implementation of road safety public education initiatives.
“The National Road Safety Council has also formulated a draft National Road Safety Plan which lays the foundation for strategic intervention to reduce road fatalities and serious road traffic accidents,” he said. He went further in adding, “Strategic collaboration with entities such as the T&T Police Service, T&T Fire Service, the Ministry of Health, and Arrive Alive have played a pivotal role in our success... By working hand-in-hand with other government agencies and civil society, we can amplify our impact and drive positive behavioural change at the individual level and wider society.”
Meanwhile, Woodside Energy which supported the event as its main sponsor, has vowed to partner with all entities to reduce road fatalities. Country Manager of Woodside Energy, Kellyanne Lochan, said, “We should target the absolute—the number zero—that we should dare to go after a target which says that we can make a continuous, a never ending type of improvement year on year in all aspects of our road safety—our statistics, our behaviour, so that we will, year on year, always improve and never ever be content until we reach that number—zero.”
