Skip to main content

Malaysia’s road safety problem needs addressing

Malaysia’s road safety problem is a cause for concern. The country’s Transport Ministry has revealed data showing that in 2016, Malaysia figured amongst the countries with the highest rate of road fatalities. The figures show that for every 10,000 registered motor vehicles on Malaysia’s roads, there were 2.55 deaths. One new strategy intended to address the problem being launched by the Transport Ministry is the Malaysia-wide National Blue Ocean Strategy Road Safety Cluster. Meanwhile the Safe Kids Mala
February 2, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Malaysia’s road safety problem is a cause for concern. The country’s Transport Ministry has revealed data showing that in 2016, Malaysia figured amongst the countries with the highest rate of road fatalities. The figures show that for every 10,000 registered motor vehicles on Malaysia’s roads, there were 2.55 deaths. One new strategy intended to address the problem being launched by the Transport Ministry is the Malaysia-wide National Blue Ocean Strategy Road Safety Cluster.

Meanwhile the Safe Kids Malaysia campaign being set up jointly by the Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) and the Road Safety Department is intended to tackle the high rate of serious injuries and deaths amongst the young. This safety programme is being run over a 2-3 year period and is aimed at reducing risks to the many primary school age children riding as pillion passengers on motorcycles. The campaign will provide parents with safety certified motorcycle helmets for their children, free of charge. Funding for the helmets is being provided jointly by Safe Kids Worldwide and the Halliburton Charitable Foundation from the US.

This move comes as part of Malaysia’s aim at meeting the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to cut road deaths by 50% by 2020 and also boost safety for vulnerable road users by 2030. Malaysia’s vehicle numbers are growing and like much of South East Asia, a high percentage of vehicle traffic is with small capacity motorcycles. But poor rider and driver training and a low level of helmet use combine to increase the rate of serious injuries and deaths amongst powered two wheeler users. Drink driving and speeding are also major factors in Malaysia’s alarming road death fatality rate. Similar problems are being seen elsewhere in South East Asia, with the effects of bad driving impacting particularly hard onto powered two wheeler users. However nearby Vietnam’s recent introduction of compulsory helmet use for motorcycle riders is already helping to cut the country’s annual death toll. And other South East Asian nations such as Malaysia and Thailand are keen to reduce injuries amongst the young.

Related Content

  • Defective eyesight, a road safety concern?
    February 16, 2012
    Failing eyesight presents safety problems for Europe's older drivers. A new report highlights substantial variation in the assessment of drivers' vision across Europe, and recommends that Member States make moves to better assess drivers' vision. Checking the vision of drivers plays a valuable role in the EU's target of halving road deaths across the EU by 2020. The aim is to achieve this road safety improvement by legislative means that change driver behaviour, raise the technical standards of vehicles and
  • Poland developing road safety strategy
    May 22, 2013
    The authorities in Poland are working on a road safety strategy intended to tackle the country’s high level of fatalities and injuries from traffic crashes. Improvements in safety levels are being seen with a decline in the fatality rate and in 2012, 3,600 people were killed representing a drop of 22.3% from the previous year. The first quarter of 2013 saw an 18.1% drop in road crashes, a 25.4% fall in fatalities and an 18.4% reduction in injuries compared with statistics available for the same period in 20
  • Europe’s road fatality rate is reducing
    July 3, 2013
    New data shows a continued improvement in road safety in Europe, with a reduction in fatalities in 2012 compared with the previous year. The information shows that there were 2,661 fewer road deaths in the EU during 2012 than in 2011. This shows countries are on track with the aim of lowering the fatality rate by half between 2010 and 2020. Over the first two years of the 2010-2020 target the EU nations reduced road deaths by 11%, 600 deaths short of the number that would have been needed to reach the EU ta
  • Vietnam’s safer roads in 2020
    October 7, 2020
    Vietnam sees a road safety improvement in 2020.