The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) says it recorded eleven percent decrease in deaths from road accident across the country during its 2018 Special Eid-el-Fitri patrol compared to 2017.
In a statement on Wednesday, the Corps Public Education Officer, Mr Bisi Kazeem, said 51 deaths were recorded during the period as against 57 deaths in the same period in 2017.
Kazeem, however, stated that 24 per cent increase in road accidents were recorded during the period, riding from 102 in 2017 to 126 this year.
He also disclosed that the number of persons involved in the accidents rose by 27 per cent during the period as 2018 had 839 victims while 662 persons were involved in 2017.
“There was a significant increase in the number of people rescued without injury during the 2018 exercise, which was given a wider coverage than previous years.
“Four hundred and six road traffic crash victims were rescued without injuries during the 2018 Sallah special patrol compared to 293 in 2017, representing a 39-per-cent increase,’’ he said.
The FRSC spokesman said 7,667 traffic offences were recorded during the celebration as against 7,533 in 2017.
According to him, 6,728 offenders were apprehended in 2018 compared to 6,562 in 2017.
He said that the most prevalent offence during the patrol was Seatbelt Use Violation, with 1,615 offenders arrested compared to 1,462 offenders in 2017.
Speed Limit Device Violation followed with 785 offenders apprehended in 2018 as against 943 in 2017, and Riding a Motorcycle without crash Helmet for which 857 violators were arrested in 2018.
Tag: Mr. Bisi Kazeem
-
Eid-El-Fitr: FRSC records less deaths, more accidents
-
FRSC begins recruitment of new personnel — Spokesman
The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) says it has begun the process of a nationwide recruitment of new personnel as recently approved by the Federal Government.
The Corps Public relation Officer, Mr Bisi Kazeem, said in a statement on Monday in Abuja that the agency’s recruitment portal (www.recruitment.frsc.gov.ng) had been opened to receive applications.
He, however, did not disclose the number of new personnel to be recruited under the exercise.
The exercise, according to him, will be conducted into the Officer, Marshal Inspectorate (MI) and Road Marshal Assistant (RMA) cadres.
“Applicants for the Officer cadre are expected to possess a first degree from recognised institutions, NYSC Discharge Certificate, and must not be more than 30 years of age.
“For the Marshal Inspectorate cadre, there are three subcategories namely, Marshal Inspector I (MI-I), Marshal Inspector II (MI-II), and Marshal Inspector III (MI-III).
“The requirements for MI-I are Higher National Diploma from recognised Institutions, NYSC discharge certificates, registered nurse and midwife, and must equally not be more than 30 years of age.
“The requirements for MI-II are: Nigerian Certificate in Education (NCE), registered nurse or midwife. Applicants to this cadre must not be more than 28 years of age.
“For MI-III, applicants must possess National Diploma (ND), Community Health Extension Workers Certificate (CHEW), and must equally not be more than 28 years of age,” he said.
Kazeem also said that application into the category of RMAII required a minimum of five credits in SSCE/GCE/NECO/NABTEB and must include Mathematics and English Language.
He also said applicants for RMAIII must possess a minimum of three credits in SSCE/GCE/NECO/NABTEB, and must not be above 27 years of age.
“Artisans and tradesmen equally fall into the same categories of RMAs, however, they must possess a minimum of four passes in SSCE/GCE/NECO/NABTEB.
“They must have trade test or other professional certificates, valid class of drivers licence (for drivers and bikers), and must not be more than 28 years of age,” he added.
According to him, shortlisted candidates are expected to come along with a print-out of their forms as well as the acknowledgement slip for screening.
While emphasising that the exercise attracts no fee, Kazeem maintained that applications must be submitted within six weeks of the publication of the advert.
-

FRSC absolves demons of blame in road accidents
The Corps Marshal, Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Mr Boboye Oyeyemi, has absolved demons of responsibility for the high rate of road traffic accidents during ember months.
Oyeyemi spoke at the launch of the 10th edition of the “Don’t Drink and Drive’’ campaign of the Nigerian Breweries (NB) in collaboration with the FRSC in Abuja on Wednesday.
Represented by the Corps Public Education Officer, Mr Bisi Kazeem, the FRSC boss blamed the situation on recklessness and irresponsible acts of motorists and other road users.
“The Ember Months being a period of festivities, people are wont to get drunk on a daily basis in the name of celebration.
“Nigerians must be aware that frequent cases of road crashes during this period, particularly the ember months are unconnected to demonic activities.
“This campaign, therefore, is a timely reminder that drinking and driving do not only pose threat to the life of the drunk driver, but also to the lives and property of other of all road users.
“Such are still a threat to the state of road infrastructure which costs a lot of resources to produce and mount on the highways and city centres,’’
Oyeyemi recalled that 31 accidents involving 122 people were recorded during the 2016 ember month, leaving five persons dead and 53 injured.
He said driving under the influence of alcohol and other drugs was largely responsible for the recorded cases of accidents.
This, according to him, underscores the fact that a drunk driver is more likely to drive dangerously or involve in other life-threatening road traffic violations.
The FRSC helmsman lauded the NB for placing the safety of lives and property of its customers above profit with the “Don’t Drink and Drive’’ campaign.
The Managing Director of NB, Mr Johan Doyer, said the campaign was an annual awareness creation and life-saving initiative, designed to promote responsible drinking among drivers and other road users.
Doyer, who was represented by the NB Head of Government Relations, Mr Vivian Ikem, said the programme has been running since 2008.
According to him, it was part of the company’s “Brewing a Better World” sustainability journey.
“For our road users, most especially our commercial drivers (tanker, luxury bus drivers and Keke and Okada riders), we want to encourage you to drink responsibly as the lives of the passengers are in your hands.
“One mistake on the wheel can take the lives of so many people.
“Our message is clear and simple: don’t drive and drive.
“If there is an organisation that is properly positioned to send this message, I think it is the Nigerian Breweries because we are more concerned about the lives of our fellow Nigerians than the money and profits that come to us an organisation.”
The NB chief executive commended the FRSC for its sustained commitment to the reduction of road traffic accidents and deaths as well as the success of the “Don’t Drink and Drive” campaign.
Some transport union leaders, present at the occasion, promised to pass the message to their members as well as institute their own measures to prevent drunk driving.
-

Three die, 50 injured in luxurious bus accident in Kogi
Three persons, a male and two females, died in an auto accident on the Auchi-Okene axis of the Benin-Lokoja road on Saturday morning.
The spokesman of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Mr Bisi Kazeem, confirmed the incident in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.
Kazeem said that 50 others, including a child, were injured and had been taken to the hospital for treatment.
He said a white Mercedez Benz Chisco Paradiso luxurious bus conveying 82 passengers was involved in the lone accident.
“The crash occurred at about 4 a.m. at the Sharp Corner Checkpoint on the Okene end of the road.
“It was caused by brake failure. A FRSC rescue team arrived at the scene 20 minutes later and took the injured and corpses to the General Hospital in Okene (Kogi),” he said.
Kazeem reiterated FRSC’s advice to motorists to regularly check their vehicles and ensure they were road worthy before putting them on the highway.
-

FRSC recalls sector commander for cutting female officials’ hair
Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety (FRSC), Dr Boboye Oyeyemi, has ordered the recall of the Corps Rivers Sector Commander, Mr Ayodele Kumapayi, for cutting the hair of some female personnel.
In an SMS to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday, Spokesman of the Corps, Mr Bisi Kazeem, said other officers concerned were also recalled.
Photos circulating on social media show Kumapayi using a pair of scissors to cut the hair of some female personnel allegedly as punishment for carrying long hairdo.
The incident reportedly took place during the routine early morning parade in Port-Harcourt when the sector commander went round to inspect his officers.
Kazeem said the recall became necessary to pave way for proper investigation into the matter.
He debunked a report by an online news medium that Kumapayi had been suspended, saying, “it is a recall, not suspension’’.
-

We are not involved in sale of speed limiting device – FRSC
The Federal Road Safety Commission (FSRC) has re-affirmed its position of non-involvement in the marketing of speed limiting devices for vehicles in the country.
Spokesman of the agency, Mr Bisi Kazeem, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Friday that accredited vendors were in charge of sale and calibration of the device.
‘’There are accredited vendors screened by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), the National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC) and FRSC.
‘’They are the ones in charge of sale and calibration of the speed limiting device, not the FRSC,’’ he said.
Kazeem was reacting to Thursday’s move by the Senate to stop the ongoing enforcement of the installation of the speed limiting device on vehicles by the FRSC.
The President of the Senate, Sen. Bukola Saraki, had asked the Committee on Federal Character to look into the matter following a point of order raised by Sen. Dino Melaye (APC – Kogi West).
Media reports quoted Melaye as saying “the proposal by the FRSC to sell speed limiting device to car owners’’ would cause further economic hardship for Nigerians.
‘’If you have two cars you buy two speed limiting devices. This is not the time to bring economic hardship upon the already traumatised people of this country.
‘’In every civilised part of the world, it is the responsibility of road safety authorities or agencies to mount speed limiting devices on roads, and when you beat this speed, they charge you.
‘’To ask individuals to purchase the speed limiting device from road safety is unacceptable and this is even not the time to do it,” Melaye was quoted as saying.
The FRSC began full enforcement of the installation of the device, which costs N35, 000, on commercial vehicles on Feb. 1, and planned to extend it to other categories of vehicles in due course.
Kazeem said introduction of the policy was within the mandate of the commission, noting that the enforcement began since Feb. 1, and not about to begin as stated by the senator.
He added that the House of Representatives had earlier endorsed the policy after a public hearing.
-

Speed limit device: FRSC issues warning tickets to 41,381 defaulters
The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) on Friday issued warning tickets to 41,381 commercial drivers nationwide who defaulted in the implementation of the Speed Limiting Device.Mr Bisi Kazeem, FRSC’s Head of Media Relations and Strategy, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that the compliance level for 43,433 vehicles was checked nationwide, out of which 2,273 vehicles complied, while 41,381 were yet to comply.Kazeem said that tickets were issued to the 41,381 yet to comply with the implementation, adding that the corps had recorded above five per cent compliance level nationwide within two weeks.He said the corps had commenced the advisory enforcement of the device which was more of subtle force, on Oct. 1, 2016“Like we explained, subtle force is a sought of enforcement approach that entails us stopping commercial vehicles and finding out whether they have installed the speed limiting device.“If they have not, a ticket is issued to that offender, it is called free safety check and it is to warn that you have been verified not to have installed the device.“Progressively as at now, 43,433 vehicles have been checked and the number with the device is 2,273, unfortunately, this is low, though in some sought, it is encouraging .“So far, Cross Rivers is leading in the compliance list with 277 installation record; Enugu State is second with 227; Akwa/Ibom has 184; while Kogi has 172 and Lagos came fifth with 145,’’ the FRSC spokesman.Kazeem said the implementation process was categorised into 36 states and the FCT, and as at Oct.14, five states were leading in the compliance level.He said Cross Rivers, Enugu and Akwa/Ibom ,however, increased the number of states that had begun the implementation of the device order given by the FRSC.NAN recalls that Rivers and Kogi had last week begun the implementation and are leading other states in the compliance level.Kazeem said that the corps would continue to check and give warning tickets to commercial vehicles that defaulted as well as encourage them to do the right thing.He advised fleet operators that had installed the device already to calibrate it and upload it with the FRSC so as ensure full compliance .He also urged the unions to continue to support the scheme and comply with it fully before February 2017 when the corps would begin strict enforcement.“No going back on punishment of defaulters, so it is a clarion call to install to comply before before 2017, ’’ the FRSC spokesman said -

Good night Lagos, good morning Abuja: Night travelers relive fun, fears
It is evening but business activities were in top gear at the Chisco Park in Jibowu, Yaba, Lagos. While a good number of people are queuing to get their tickets from the front desk, others are sorting their luggage and presenting their tickets for inspection as they set to board the Abuja bound-luxury bus. The night travelers had more men than women. Sighted among them was also a youth corps member, Mathew Ebika who was waiting to board an Abuja-bound luxury bus. He is set on a journey to Okene where he had to present himself for NYSC clearance the following morning.
“I wanted to travel in the morning but I couldn’t get a day bus because my luggage was bulky. I even went to Ibadan but I had to come back here and use the option of the night bus. Night travelling is not my thing; I only use it when it is necessary”, he said.
Necessity is said to be the mother of invention. Many night travelers have had to embark on such journeys because of the need to keep some urgent appointment. For others, it is an easier alternative for road travels. It promises an escape from the stress of day time travelling, especially for destinations like Lagos -Abuja or other popular routes which may take too many kilometers to cover.
While many will describe travelling at night as fun owing to some whimsical exciting adventure of sorts, others have had gory tales to deter them from night travelling save for the need to keep an urgent appointment or execute an assignment.
Oluwaloseyi Babaeko still bore fatal remembrance of a night journey he undertook three years ago from Lagos to Sokoto. Babaeko, who boarded a Sokoto state transport service bus around 5pm at a Lagos park, was headed to the seat of the caliphate to honour the call for national youth service. The journey was smooth until around 4 am on Kebbi highway when the vehicle conveying him to his destination was attacked by Fulani herdsmen.

Painful tale of National Youth Service Corps Member, Oluwaloseyi Babaeko “The two rear tyres of the bus suddenly burst while on motion; the vehicle skidded off the road and we landed in a pit on the Kebbi highway. As I crawled out of the mangled bus, I discovered that I had a fractured leg and a dislocated hip. Other people in the bus, including youth corps members, also sustained injuries. The accident occurred on July 3rd 2012 at 4am”, he recount sorrowfully.
He added that the accident did not stop the Fulani herdsmen from robbing the injured passengers as the victims were disposed of valuables, including money. They writhed in pains for two hours before policemen arrived at the scene.
Babaeko, now based in the UK where he is pursuing a master’s degree at the University of Leeds further bares his mind on the phenomenon: “Night journey has its good side but the fragile security situation in Nigeria has made it a dangerous adventure. There is also the bad roads and the reckless nature of most of our drivers. In short, I will say it is a bad idea to travel at night. I had an accident from it and I am yet to recover three years after as I will need a hip replacement”.
An editor remembers
An editor of a Lagos-based newspaper, who pleads anonymity, also relived his experience about some night journeys by luxurious buses which he undertook many years ago when he was still a reporter.
“My friend,” he told our reporter, “those experiences were scary. I remember I was called late in the evening many years ago to be in Abuja by 9a.m. the following day over a matter I had been pursuing; because of the urgency, I had to undertake the trip by night bus and I almost regretted it.
“While others were sleeping on the way, I couldn’t; I was very scared because I had read reports about how many passengers were waylaid and robbed during such night journeys. Midway, our bus suddenly came to a place where many other buses had stopped and parked. We too had no choice than to park and wait. What was the matter? We were told that armed robbers were operating ahead, that it was not safe to go ahead yet. Our ‘escort’ (an armed security personnel hired by bus to protect the passengers against attacks) alighted. We all launched into prayers calling for divine intervention. The situation was quite charged. However, after about 40 minutes of waiting, there was a signal that we could now proceed. I heaved a very deep sigh of relief.”
The editor said some years earlier, he had to take another night bus to Kaduna. The experience, according to him, was similar. He said: “The journey to Kaduna was smooth until we got to a village I cannot now remember. There was information that we had to stop and park because armed robbers were operating somewhere ahead. We had to wait for about 30 minutes before we were cleared to move. But the rest journey was smooth.”
The editor added: “The most recent experience was in 1999. I had to cover the general elections then in Yola, Adamawa State. That was the election that brought in former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s regime. Yola was the base of Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, who was then running for Adamawa governorship. Of course, he won the election and later became Vice President.
“I had made the journey to Yola by flight to Kano and then Kano to Yola by road. It was an 11-hour journey. The journey went far into the night. I became scared when I heard in the vehicle that Kano-Yola Road then was infested with armed robbers who frequently blocked the road and robbed night passengers at will.
“In fact, my heart nearly jumped out of my mouth when after negotiating a bend around 10pm, we suddenly came by an unusual road block mounted with big tree trunks that didn’t allow any passage at all. Our vehicle stopped. What was the matter? For the five minutes that it took our driver to decide to request help to move those tree trunks away from the road to allow us to pass, it was as if the ground should open up and swallow me. I was perspiring profusely.
“Going by the horrifying tales I had been regaled by a co-passenger inside the Peugeot 505 station wagon car, I had thought that those who mounted the road block were only lurking inside the bush, waiting to pounce on us. However, mercifully, nobody was in sight and nobody came out from the bush while the road block was being cleared by the driver, assisted by some courageous passengers who could alight. It was when we got to Yola that we discovered how lucky we were because a passenger bus had just been robbed before we got to that road block!
“On the return journey, based on advice, I went to Jos by road from Yola, a distance of about six hours, to connect a flight to Lagos. However, I was told in Jos Airport that the next available flight to Lagos was three days away! I can’t afford to wait in Jos for three days doing nothing. So, I had to take another night bus to Lagos, a 14-hour journey, against my will. But the Jos-Lagos journey was smooth. No incident, but I didn’t enjoy it at all!”
Another practitioner of the pen profession, who also did now want his name in print, who is of the opinion that night travelling could be fun while recounting an experience, added that the adventure could be a nightmare as well.
“The ‘luxurious bus’, as it is locally called, delayed about an hour from its usual 5pm departure time. That was because sorting out the passengers’ luggage into the compartments took a while. It was a well-loaded bus, by the time it drove out of its terminus at Jibowu area of Lagos. We were on our way to Abuja with arrival time at Jabi expectedly being 7am the following day”.
He said he preferred the night journey because it allows him to sleep all through the journey. He and the co-passengers were in that state of sleep after a dinner of Jollof rice and fried meat served by the transporter company before fate brought in a different story as the journey progressed into midnight.
The unusual happened! It was the shattering noise of the bus windows as it splashed splinters of glasses on the bodies of passengers that violently woke him.
“The gunshots were repeated again with more spray of bullets around and inside the bus. Although the bulky driver struggled to keep moving, but a rain of bullets on the windscreen suddenly seemed to force the driver to halt the bus.
“I thought the driver was actually dead. How could he survive such! He didn’t have a chance. The inside lights of the bus went off as the engine stopped and darkness enveloped the surrounding. I couldn’t even see who was next to me. The only noises that followed were menacing threats from the armed robbers instructing us to co-operate and bring out all our phones, money and other valuables and surrender them.
“Before I could wake properly, they were inside the bus, hitting the passengers in the front seat with their guns. I shivered with fright! That must have been the state of my fellow passengers that horrible night”.
The journalist recalled that after they were disposed of their items, they were forced into the dark bush by the road with a stern warning to lie on the floor. The robbers went on to rape some of the female passengers. When the robbers were done with their acts, the passengers were left in the cold environment dark in the midnight.
As the robbers made to leave while complaining that they did not gain much financially from the robbery, the passengers laid in their vulnerable state with the fear of being re-robbed by another set of armed men until the driver emerged and struggled with the engine.
Having realized that they had just gone past Ife when the robbery happened, they had to accept the reality that the journey to Abuja had been aborted as the vehicle wobbled back to Ife.
“It was at Ife that those of us who were still intending to complete the journey were given a choice of joining another bus. I did. There was no returning to Lagos for me that night because I had appointments lined up in Abuja. Though I had been dispossessed of my phones, I did not lost money to the night thieves. A particular passenger lost more than N400, 000, while others lost other varying amounts. I got safely to Abuja, but I have long stopped travelling by night bus.”
‘Not a women’s world’
Before Madam Toyin Aribilola relocated from the north to come stay permanently in Lagos, she confessed to being a perpetual night traveler plying the Kaduna- Lagos route regularly to trade in ladies wears.
“I like night travelling because once you close your eyes, by the time you open it, you are at your destination. The journey seems shorter during the night and you can be sure of less stress on the road. That was between 1995 to 2000, I don’t know how the roads are like now because I have not travelled far distance in recent times.
Did she record any horrible experience? “Yes”, she said. “On two occasions”.
“The first was while returning from Lagos to Kaduna in a coaster bus. We got to Birnu Kwari not far from Kaduna and a stone was hurled at the windscreen of the vehicle. The sound was deafening. The people in the front seat were splattered with glasses but the driver didn’t stop. I almost urinated in my pant. I thought the bus would just dive into the bush and we would all perish. We were shouting the name of the God in our different religion. Luckily, we escaped to a safe place and later discovered that we could have been victims of an armed robbery attack save for the courageous act of the driver who didn’t stop despite the attack.
“The second experience was when I had to enter the vehicle known as Bolekaja or Tan le se. I was also returning but I couldn’t get a bus from Lagos to Kaduna. I went to Ibadan hoping I would get a vehicle but it was a futile effort. Then I saw this Bolekaja mini-trailer built with planks heading to Kaduna. I didn’t know anybody I could spend the night with in Ibadan; so I dared the odds and entered. I climbed and sat with another woman. To our front were some cows that were also part of the journey. Some Hausa boys sat at the top hedge of the vehicles smoking weeds. The funny thing was that their legs were even touching our heads and as the woman beside me kept hitting their legs with her slippers shouting ‘tan le se’, it was then I understood the meaning of the word. We could not even change our seats because of the fear of moving too close to the cows packed in the vehicle. I had my heart in my mouth the whole period of the journey. I was afraid of being raped and robbed by those boys as they were high on substance”.
Mr. Patrick Adie, is a businessman whose business interest makes him travel by bus often in the night. The Reporter met him at the Jibowu park where he was in an Abuja-bound Sienna car for a night journey. He speaks on hassles he has experienced: “I have seen drivers who sleep while driving at night and they have accidents. The second is the pot holes and the robberies. Most times, sick people are also transferred through the night but the tension increases their sickness”.
He narrated an experience in 2007 with robbers at Okene while coming from Abuja to Lagos where they met robbers. Since then, he vowed never go on a night journey except if there is an assignment worth risking.
“There was a time I was on a journey to Sokoto and it was the same thing. Sometimes you may see dead bodies on the road and your conscience would be sired. It is better going on the day time when the driver will be seeing the road clearly. Even if he has mastered the road before then, he might get to that point where he is tempted to sleep. That is a grave danger”.
He advised government to dualise the roads and also station security men to man major roads, especially spots like Kogi, Benin bypass and Ife road which are notorious for robbers. Having two drivers is better so that while one is sleeping, the other is on the wheel, he added.
‘Bad roads, robberies, callous policemen ruin fun of night travelling- Drivers
Perhaps it is not farfetched to state that no one feels the tension of the pressure of night travelling as the drivers who navigate the vehicles.Mr. Frank Chuks, a businessman cum driver who has been driving for 15 years, described night travelling as fun and risky.
“The fun part of travelling in the night is that you can stop, take some bottles and sometimes enjoy banters with mobile policemen. Sometimes you also run when you see people running maybe from armed robbers, you stop and park somewhere. I think it is risky and fun.”
According to him, driving in the night on Nigerian roads is not safe since the bad state of the road makes it easier for armed robbers to attack travelers.
Reacting to why people still patronize night travelling in spite of the risk involved, he stated: “People go for night travel because of urgent necessities. Considering how unsafe and unkept the roads are, I don’t think any reasonable person should wait till evening before embarking on a journey at night. Travelling in the night should only come as a desperate need”.
To make night journey less troublesome, he appealed to government to fix the roads and curb the activities of terror police men who use the opportunity of the cover of the night to harass and extort drivers.
Another driver, Mr Ben Udechukwu, who drives a van which transports cargoes from Lagos to Port Harcourt, he revealed that there are times when robbers disguise as policemen to attack vehicles in the night.
“My experience especially during the festive season was not funny. The road was busy and bad especially from Shagamu to Ajebandele. I pray the government to help us to do something about it. Sometimes you will see trailers running on one way.”
Mr. Bisi Kazeem, Head, Media Relations and Strategy in a phone interview said (FRSC) in a phone interview said FRSC plays an advisory role because the commission is not empowered under legislation to ban night travelling.
“It is advisable to avoid night travel because of the risk involved. The driver is not able to see both the road surface and poth-holes well in the night. Even when there is an accident, rescue is delayed because FRSC does not work fully in the night; we only do skeletal duties for security reasons since we do don’t carry arms. Every command has a rescue team but in the night, it is not as functional as it is done in day time”.
Mr. Kazeem also said crash-related cases are rampant at night because some drivers are fond of over speeding, while some drive under the influence of alchohol and use drugs to stay awake. This, he said, comes with many attendant risks. In the night, there is also the likelihood of drivers misbehaving because of the limited presence of law enforcement agents on the road, The Nation learnt.
Since it is obvious that people have to travel in the night, does the agency carry out preemptive measures? “We let the vehicle drivers know that it is better to be late than being the late. We advise to make sure their light, wipers and fire extinguisher are in good condition, if they have to travel at night.
“Also, the drivers should be a defensive and apply the common sense limit. While driving in the night, if the law stipulates 100 kilometers, you don’t have to use that in order to be able to control your vehicle in case of any eventuality,” he submitted.