Audio By Carbonatix
Private legal practitioner, Kofi Abotsi, is blaming the absence of a policy framework on road safety for the continuous carnage on the country’s roads.
He said the recommendations by the inter-ministerial committee on road safety set up last year will not work unless they are backed by a policy direction.
“I think what led to setting up the 'Ebony Committee', if you can describe it as such, has to do with the fact that there was a recognition that there was a major trend of road accidents claiming too many lives.
“What is fundamentally obliterated is the absence of a coordinated or coherent policy framework on road safety,” he said on Joy FM/MultiTV’s news analysis show, Newsfile, Saturday.

Private legal practitioner, Ernest Kofi Abotsi
Over 90 people yesterday died in two separate accidents on the Kintampo Atebubu and Cape Coast roads.
In his response to the sad incident, President Akufo-Addo called for the immediate implementation of recommendations reached by the inter-ministerial committee on road safety set up last year.
But Mr. Abotsi said the recommendations itself won’t solve the problem unless there is a policy framework in place.
He believes that the policy “would reflect in a number of things. For example, in the training given to people who drive private cars and those who drive commercial vehicles.”
On his part, media practitioner Randy Abbey is convinced government is only paying lip service to the implementation of the recommendations.

“So this is an action plan, approved by the President announced on 16 of April 2018. We are here, a year on, and we are discussing 90 people dying on a weekend. We love to talk!” the Good Morning Ghana host on Metro TV reiterated his earlier observation.
However, the National Road Safety Commission (NRSC) says it has already started implementation of the inter-ministerial committee’s report.
Director of Planning and Programmes at the Commission, David Osafo Adonteng says work has started.
“There were various line of actions, for education, enforcement and engineering. The Education aspect, the NRSC was to spearhead it and that was like the President pledging ¢6.5 million for the Commission to scale up the education which he has fulfilled and we are already implementing since December,” he said.
According to him, the police enforcement unit wanted approval for them to adopt cameras or technology to enforce road traffic regulations especially on speeding, which is yet to be done.
He said the Ghana Highway Authority and the Department of Urban Roads also wanted ¢300 million to do road markings, signage and traffic lights to enforce safety but they are yet to receive the money.
He said the police needs approval from the Police Council to get to work on enforcement.
Watch the video below for the takes of Abdul Malik Kweku Baako, Editor-in-Chief of New Crusading Guide newspaper; Kofi Abotsi, past Dean of GIMPA Law School and Partner at Axis Legal; and Kofi Bentil Senior Vice President of IMANI-Africa, on the issue of road accidents in Ghana.
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