Skip to main content

BlackBerry cuts made Middle East roads safer, police say

A dramatic fall in traffic accidents last week has been directly linked to the three-day disruption in BlackBerry services, according to an article in The National, the English language newspaper published by Abu Dhabi Media.In Dubai, traffic accidents fell 20 per cent from average rates on the days BlackBerry users were unable to use its messaging service.
May 2, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A dramatic fall in traffic accidents last week has been directly linked to the three-day disruption in BlackBerry services, according to an article in The National, the English language newspaper published by Abu Dhabi Media.

In Dubai, traffic accidents fell 20 per cent from average rates on the days BlackBerry users were unable to use its messaging service. In Abu Dhabi, the number of accidents fell 40 per cent and there were no fatal accidents.

On average there is a traffic accident every three minutes in Dubai, while in Abu Dhabi there is a fatal accident every two days.

Lt Gen Dahi Khalfan Tamim, the chief of Dubai Police, and Brig Gen Hussein Al Harethi, the director of the Abu Dhabi Police traffic department, linked the drop in accidents to the disruption of BlackBerry services between Tuesday and Thursday.

Email, Messenger and internet functions were unavailable to users in the Middle East, Africa and Europe after a crucial link in the BlackBerry network failed.

Gen Tamim said police found "a significant drop in accidents by young drivers and men on those three days". He said young people were the largest user group of the Messenger service.

"The accidents that occur from the use of these devices range between minor and moderate ones, but at times they are deadly," Gen Tamim said.

Brig Gen Al Harethi said: "Accidents were reduced by 40 per cent and the fact that BlackBerry services were down definitely contributed to that."

"Absolutely nothing has happened in the past week in terms of killings on the road and we're really glad about that," Brig Gen Al Harethi said. "People are slowly starting to realise the dangers of using their phone while driving. The roads became much safer when BlackBerry stopped working."

For the full original story, click this link:
%$Linker: External 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.thenational.ae/news/uae-news/blackberry-cuts-made-roads-safer-police-say The National false http://thenational.ae/news/uae-news/blackberry-cuts-made-roads-safer-police-say false false%>

Related Content

  • VIDEO: A little rain never hurt anyone and my car can take it
    June 10, 2016
    It wasn’t some city located in the globe’s tropical regions where rainfall is measured in metres each year. It was the northern European metropolis of London. This past week rain hammered down onto the fair city and immediate surroundings, creating flash floods that made driving in some areas very dangerous. But some drivers refused to be deterred from taking to their favourite road. A little rain wasn’t going to stop them – even if it amounted to a month’s rain, 35mm, in only several hours. It bei
  • Houston TranStar wins award for travel monitoring
    April 30, 2012
    Houston TranStar has received the "2011 Digital Government Achievement Award" from the Center for Digital Government (government-to-government category). The award is for TranStar's cutting-edge Anonymous Wireless Address Matching travel time information system.
  • VIDEO captures unloved, unowned Reynolds Bridge reduced to rubble
    May 18, 2015
    There was a big bang in a small town in the US state of Pennsylvania this month when a fragmentation explosion brought down the 100-year-old Reynolds Road Bridge. It was the end to the unloved bridge near Factoryville, population around 1,500. Factoryville is notable for a lack of factories ever since the one and only plant, a wool-into-cloth factory, closed down several years after it opened in the 1800s. Local residents were not sorry to see the felling of the 40m long, reinforced concrete arch deck
  • VIDEO: People see red over white elephant of a blue bike lane
    November 1, 2016
    The Scottish roads authority has backpedalled on its recently improved cycle lane along a major route on the south-west coast, close to the city of Ayr.

    Amid local authority concerns over traffic congestion and one man’s media-grabbing protest, the cycle lane will now be ripped out – after being installed this summer.

    As the video shows, it is a protected wide lane, often painted blue. Cars appear to travel freely beside it.