• Tuesday, 05 November 2024

"The numbers have to come down" President Ruto calls on transport CS to make sure road accidents are significantly reduced

President William Ruto has called on Cabinet Secretary for Roads and Transport Kipchumba Murkomen to make sure road accidents are significantly reduced.

The Head of State was speaking during the launch of the National Road Safety Action Plan at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) in Nairobi on Wednesday, April 17, 2024.

Ruto asserted that the road accident-causing factors are known, and acting on them is the surest way of reducing such cases.

"We all know the major causes of road accidents are reckless driving, overspeeding, and drunk driving," President Ruto said.

"The numbers have not been coming down; they have been going up. Every year, the numbers are going up. Waziri and your team, the numbers have to come down, and the template on how the numbers should come down is known, is practised elsewhere, and impunity is keeping us from doing the right thing."

Ruto also lauded the recent actions taken by Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja that are aimed at reducing alcohol intake in the city.

"Governor Sakaja said he has closed the pubs and places where alcohol is sold at the terminus. There cannot be greater impunity than licensing alcohol to be sold at termini when we know the people at the termini are drivers," he added..

"I want to promise you, governor, as I have said before, that you will never get a call from me to tell you to do the popular thing. I will always call to tell you to do the right thing. It may not be popular, but as long as it is the right thing, do it."

On his part, Murkomen acknowledged that there is a serious issue on the roads, as indicated by the rising number of deaths.

"The statistics are very grim. To be losing between 4,000 and 4,600 every year, the highest being in 2022, and if we had gone at that rate, we would have surpassed that number," Murkomen said.

"To have about 20,000 critically injured people in our hospitals, and it does not hurt us to know that we do not feel the pain enough, and I am telling Kenyans that this is something that must worry us."

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