Audio By Carbonatix
To reduce the rate of accidents and casualties caused by commercial motor riders, popularly called “Okada riders”, the Ghana Medical Association (GMA) has called for a total ban of their operations.
Dr Frederick Kwarteng, the Head of the Accident, Emergency and Orthopaedic Department, Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital made the call in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Accra.
“Until the government implements policies to regulate the use of motorbikes especially for commercial purposes, it should ban their operations to save lives. This is what we want,” he said.
He said it had become necessary as the number of road traffic accidents caused by Okada men kept becoming rampant, and got worse during the Christmas festive season.
“And this is causing the victims to lose their lives, legs and arms, brains, wealth and entire social life,” he said.
From December 21, 2019, to January 1, 2020, the Department admitted 79 vehicle accident victims, 58 motorcycle accident victims and one bicycle accident victim.
On January 2, 2020, as at the 1300 hours, the Department had admitted one car accident victim and four motorcycle accident victims.
Dr Kwarteng believes that if law enforcement agencies are unable to enforce traffic regulations, Okada riders should be banned entirely as their accident cases were as a result of recklessness and disrespect for road traffic regulations.
“The traffic light says red and he crosses, speeding and riding recklessly. People use motorbikes in some jurisdictions and even in the North but we don’t hear about such injuries. But in Accra, it is often recorded because they are not being controlled, and even choose to create their own paths through traffic,” he said.
Dr Boateng said from December 22 to 23, 2019, 30 road traffic accident cases were recorded out of which 20 were serious Okada related cases.
Some of the victims had crushed bones, fractures, severe wounds, head injuries and traumas.
As a result of the severity of some of the cases, he said, some of the victims could have their limbs amputated to save their lives if all procedures of treatment were ineffective.
Latest Stories
-
MLS bans Yeboah & Jones for betting offences
4 hours -
He called me traitor 50 times – Mourinho sent off after celebrating goal
5 hours -
Eni Aluko wins Joey Barton libel case over X posts
5 hours -
Ten players from Jamaican club denied entry to US
5 hours -
Some banks move to sell assets of PBC over GHC 300 million debt
5 hours -
Uefa fears impact of Premier League spending rules
5 hours -
EU to sign historic defence pact with Ghana in global security pivot
5 hours -
Liverpool lose to Galatasaray in Slot’s 100th game in charge
5 hours -
Iran begins laying mines in Strait of Hormuz, sources say
5 hours -
Joey Barton refused bail after ‘attack at golf club’
5 hours -
GH¢68.7bn gov’t arrears bombshell: Parliament orders probe over suspected fraud
5 hours -
The public display of students’ academic results in basic schools: A case against a damaging practice
6 hours -
GOIL jumps GH¢0.21, MTN Ghana surges past GH¢6.30 in record-breaking GSE session
6 hours -
NAIMOS disrupts illegal mining activities at Gwira Banso-Eshiem
6 hours -
Ashesi hosts Kensei Kai Foundation’s maiden Inter-University Karate Camp
7 hours
