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750 Ugandans Killed Between 6pm & 8pm In Roads Crashes Every Year

Sonia Kyoshaba was an active university student of Hotel Management who took a Boda Boda intending to reach her hostel in time to beat an assignment deadline when a reckless driver knocked her and she lost consciousness. When she woke up in hospital, she had lost her limb up to the hip and could no longer defecate, condemned to a lifetime of using special bags connected to her intestine that cost her 10,000 everyday.

Yet Kyoshaba is among the lucky 1,000 victims who survive death and nursed permanent injuries got on the country’s roads from 6.00pm to 8pm. Another 750 victims are killed on the roads in the same period.

According to traffic and road safety statistics for the past three years, this number could be even more since some crash victims die after leaving the hospital, and their cause of death not recorded accurately.

For instance, 3,689 people died in road crashes in 2018 but 781 died between 6 pm and 8 pm which was 21 percent of the death toll.

In 2019, out of 3,880 who suffered accidents, 790 died between 6pm and 8pm. The situation was not any better in 2020 as 805 out of 3,663 victims lost their lives on the road between 6 pm and 8pm which was a 22 percent raise.

Sonia Kyoshaba, was pursuing Hotel Management at Kyambogo University, lost the whole of her right limb last year the cause was speeding by an oncoming car, which was overtaking recklessly. Kyoshaba had the accident in Kisaasi, Nakawa division of Kampala.

“I saw two vehicles coming from the opposite direction and the second one overtook. That is the last thing I saw and it knocked us down,” recalls the young lady, who is still terrible pain. “I was taken to Mulago hospital where I was amputated and I lost the whole right limb from the pelvis.

Jimmy Sserunkuma, a teacher, attributes the high numbers of evening crashes to absence of traffic officers on roads. Sserunkuma, says he rarely finds traffic officers on roads between 7pm and 9pm.

“I often drive in the evening hours but I don’t see traffic officers on road even at busy road junctions. For example, I come from Goma Division of Mukono Municipality, but you find no police officers at junctions like Kyaliwajjala, Namugongo or Kira. These junctions are always very busy up to around 10pm,” Sserunkuma said.

Rogers Kawuma Nsereko, the Kampala metropolitan traffic police commander, says it would be unfair to blame police officers for the huge numbers of road fatalities between 6pm and 8pm. Nsereko believes there is recklessness of drivers, pedestrians and motorcyclists around that time yet there is a lot of activities as people are driving back home and doing last minutes shopping.

“You should know that our traffic officers are also human beings,” Nsereko says. “Once the jam has reduced, it also time for our officers to fall out. Stopping accidents is not majorly ours. You as a driver or pedestrian it is your responsibility to ensure you are not knocked. It would be unfair to blame traffic police for accidents. We cannot be everywhere every time to ensure your safety.”

Nsereko adds that Kampala Metropolitan needs over 1,100 traffic personnel compared to huge numbers of vehicles, motorcycles and pedestrians. But the area only has about 700 meaning there is deficit of more than 400 personnel.

Sam Bambaza, the executive director Hope for Victims of Traffic Accidents -HOVITA, believes the ever increasing road fatalities and injuries are as a result of neglected post-crash investigations.

Bambaza, says there is need to have a chain of responsibility where a road crash is probed from the driver, manager of the transport company in cases of buses, to the owners and the regulator.

“What you need to know is that all these crashes are not investigated,” Bambaza says. “The moment you don’t investigate; you are treating something you don’t know. Police tend to focus on the criminality other than investigating to solve the problem so that such kind of crash doesn’t occur.”

Bambaza adds: “We don’t have chain responsibility policy. Chain of responsibility means that not only the driver has the control of transport means and should not be the only one held responsible. The owner might not be servicing the car, not buying spare parts. The regulator should be held responsible. Why would a driver who has crashed one bus be allowed to driver another for example?”

Away from the more than 700 people who die in road crashes between 6pm and 8pm every year, at least 1,000 survive with dreadful injuries. Such injuries leave many people incurring expenses for the rest of their life, like Kyoshaba with her schoolmates spent over 23 million shillings in medical expenses and is currently living with a colostomy on one side of her belly, costing her 10,000 Shillings every day.

-URN

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