Audio By Carbonatix
A total of 242 lives were lost in road accidents in the Central Region in the year 2020 as against 183 recorded in 2019.
In all, 978 road crashes involving 679 commercial vehicles, 526 private vehicles, and 396 motorcycles were recorded in 2020 as against 902 in 2019, representing an increase of 8.4 percent.
One hundred and twenty-two (122) of the people who died were in commercial vehicles, 48 in private vehicles and 72 on motorcycles.
Regional Head of the National Road Safety Authority (NRSA), Ms Linda Affotey-Annang, revealed this in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Cape Coast.
She said 1,511 persons were injured with some of them being very serious as against 1,554 persons injured in 2019.
Of the total figure of crashes recorded, 499 of them were minor, 335 serious and 174 fatal.
Though pedestrian knock-down, which claimed 67 lives, reduced to 214 cases as against 242 of the previous year, Ms Affottey-Annag described it as ‘unacceptable’ saying, pedestrians were vulnerable road users who needed to be protected.
She expressed worry about the increasing statistics of accidents involving motorcycles and called for concerted efforts from all stakeholders to bring the situation under control.
Taking stock of the year 2020, Ms Affottey-Annang, said despite the Covid-19 pandemic, authorities in the Region undertook series of road safety educational campaigns concentrated at accident prone areas and in the communities.
This, she said paid off with the reduction in the number of road crashes and casualties recorded especially in the last quarter of 2020.
She also assured that the NRSA would continue to build institutional collaborations with stakeholders such as the DVLA, Police MTTD, GPRTU among others to ensure compliance of road safety regulations.
Additionally, the authority she noted intended to use road safety inspectors to ensure public compliance with best road safety practices while it continued with its advocacy role to foster behavioral change especially among drivers.
Ms Affotey-Annag called on all and sundry to play their respective roles, saying, "road safety was a shared responsibility."
Latest Stories
-
Bagbin rejects “functus officio” claim, says Parliament can still revisit passed bills before assent
15 minutes -
NACOC, GSA begin scientific testing of seized drugs ahead of 2026 World Drug Day destruction
21 minutes -
Speaker raises concern over increasing cases being pushed to Supreme Court
25 minutes -
Plea bargain request does not mean guilt – Wontumi’s lawyer
26 minutes -
DVLA rejects 4,896 Ghana driver licence applicants over failed eye examinations in 2025
27 minutes -
Afari Military Hospital project 60% complete as government re-engages contractor — Defence Ministry
28 minutes -
Wontumi Exim Bank fraud trial: Plea bargain can undermine the fight against corruption — Vitus Azeem
33 minutes -
Ghana World Cup 2026 team guide
40 minutes -
GIS raises alarm over abuse of ECOWAS Free Movement Protocol, warns of security threats
1 hour -
Miss Ghana 2026 auditions set for June 27
1 hour -
GH₵94bn Negative Equity: Is it time for the Bank of Ghana to think like investors or step too far?
1 hour -
El Niño under way and threatens weather extremes, scientists say
1 hour -
PAPSS is the payment backbone Africa’s trade has been waiting for
2 hours -
SIM re-registration: A business cost or a public burden?
2 hours -
Reparatory justice and historical honesty: Why Ghana must lead a more courageous conversation
2 hours