Audio By Carbonatix
The National Road Safety Authority (NRSA) has in collaboration with the Motor Traffic and Transport Department (MTTD) and Driver Vehicle Licensing Authority (DVLA) removed unprescribed lamps from 1,418 vehicles across the country over the last week.
This follows a coordinated enforcement action to improve night driving by enforcing Regulations 65 of the Road Traffic Regulations, 2012 (L.I. 2180).
Out of a total of the 1418 vehicles accosted during the exercise, 900 vehicles were registered as commercial vehicles, 99 as institutional vehicles and 393 as private vehicles.
Trucks and trailers led the pack of offending vehicles with 602 representing, 42.4% followed by 263 mini-buses, 179 motorcycles/tricycles, 164 saloon cars and 106 pick-ups representing 18.5%, 12.6% and 11.5% and 7.4% respectively.
The top six regions for the abuse of Regulation 65 were Greater Accra (223), Bono (182), Bono East (121) Upper East(146), Oti(112) and Western(107) regions. These regions account for 63.3% of all offending vehicles impounded during the first week of the exercise.
The Head of Regulations, Inspections & Compliance at the NRSA, Kwame Koduah Atuahene expressed satisfaction on the progress made and the support from MTTD and DVLA.
He said; "we are taking one step at a time to improve upon the current road safety situation. Removing killer lamps from 1418 vehicles means that we have potentially prevented 1418 crashes at night. We expect vehicle owners and drivers to voluntarily comply with these standards or regulations while the amnesty from prosecution is still open."
"From next week, we shall kick in the prosecution of offending drivers while the Authority considers an imposition of administrative penalties against organizations that fail to ensure that their vehicles comply with Regulation 65 of L.I. 2180."
The Authority has since September this year been educating the public on the requirements of Regulation 65 and the dangers associated with using excess lamps or wrong placement of lamps on our vehicles. They blind other road users and expose them to the risk of crashes at night.
The penalty for using unprescribed lamps or killer lamps is a fine of up to GH¢600 and imprisonment of up to three months or both against the offending driver.
However, in the case of vehicles registered by institutions or permitted for use by institutions without complying with Regulation 65 of the Road Traffic Regulations, the Authority may exercise its mandate to impose an administrative penalty of between 5,000 penalty units (GHs60,000) and 10,000 penalty units (GHs120,000).
Latest Stories
-
Today’s Front pages: Friday, June 19, 2026
7 minutes -
NPP should be careful with me; I’ll spill the beans if they provoke me – Kennedy Agyapong warns
31 minutes -
KAIPTC Deputy Commandant urges stronger evidence-based security response
46 minutes -
KAIPTC restructures research and academic units to strengthen response to West Africa’s evolving security challenges
55 minutes -
KAIPTC Research Director defends structural split as response to fast-moving West Africa security threats
1 hour -
Ghana committed to renewable energy expansion – Energy Minister
1 hour -
Valedictorian urges graduates to embrace character and purpose at St. Bernadette Soubirous School ceremony
1 hour -
Africa must define its own energy transition path – Jinapor
2 hours -
Giddens: Ghanaian-German afropop and afrofusion artiste on rise
2 hours -
Jinapor highlights energy access, industrialisation and sustainability as pillars for Africa’s just energy transition
2 hours -
Green Project Preparation Facility launched to unlock climate infrastructure investment in Ghana
2 hours -
Gender Ministry congratulates Sylvia Ama Adusu on historic ITLOS election
3 hours -
Ghana Feel It All as Coca-Cola kicks off FIFA World Cup 26 campaign
3 hours -
Reparations for slavery must go beyond financial compensation – Macron
3 hours -
Redirect 24-Hour Market funds to complete Agenda 111 hospitals – Asenso-Boakye to gov’t
3 hours