Skip to main content

Vietnam and Laos addressing road safety

Accident statistics from Laos and Vietnam reveal a growing awareness of the problems needing attention.
February 29, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Accident statistics from Laos and Vietnam reveal a growing awareness of the problems needing attention. Vietnam's Government is launching a new road safety campaign while the authorities in Laos have identified poor road conditions and increasing vehicle numbers as playing a role in rising accident rates.

The new campaign by the 983 Vietnamese Government is intended to reduce traffic fatalities by 38% by 2020. Called Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020, this should cut accidents to eight for every 100,000 persons in the country by 2020, instead of the current 13 of 100,000.

The campaign includes distribution of materials to primary schools, road safety demonstrations, art drawing programmes, and distribution of helmets amongst powered two wheeler users. Those that will take part in the campaign include 3391 United Nations International Children's Fund (Unicef), 3263 World Health Organisation (WHO), 3390 Asia Injury Prevention Foundation (AIP Foundation) and Ministry of Transport. It is estimated that by 2020, 1.9 million people will die due to road accidents every year, while 50 million will suffer from injuries that are not life-threatening, should no major action be taken.

The issue of road safety is of key importance in Asia in particular. Improving economic conditions means that vehicle numbers are growing fast in several countries, while infrastructure investment is also expanding. However safety provisions are proving unequal to the task of holding back the growing numbers of injuries and fatalities. Several countries such as China and Malaysia have already initiated campaigns to reduce accident levels, with China for example recently introducing more severe penalties for drink drivers as well as tougher enforcement by police. The Laos Traffic Police Department's Accident Prevention Division points to poor road conditions and growing vehicle numbers as being major factors in the fast growing accident rate in the country. Official data shows that there is a major disparity between the number of vehicles registered in the country in comparison with the number of driving license holders.

Statistics collected by the Laos Traffic Police Department reveal that there were a total of 3,557 traffic accidents between October 2010 and April 2011, including 507 incidents involving fatalities. Alcohol use by drivers and poor knowledge of safe driving are attributed to a large number of accidents in the country. The total number of registered vehicles in Laos is expected to hit 1.8 million in 2011. At the end of 2010, the number of driver's licenses issued stood at just 40% of the number of vehicles registered on the country's roads.

Related Content

  • Road safety of concern in Sweden and Israel
    January 8, 2015
    Worrying data on road safety has been released from Sweden and Israel. Sweden’s record on road safety is one of the best in the world, with a combination of tough enforcement and stiff penalties along with effective driver education and training having helped lower the country’s fatality rate. However the latest official figures from the Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket) show that 275 people were killed on Swedish roads in 2014, compared with 260 people in 2013. This may yet prove to be a stat
  • IRF Geneva highlights making roads safe: a priority for all
    May 15, 2014
    IRF Geneva’s Susanna Zammataro highlights the importance of the Federation’s ongoing commitment to the work of the United Nations Road Safety Collaboration, with which she serves as co-chair of the project group dedicated to Safer Roads and Mobility On 10th April, the United Nations General Assembly was due to discuss a new global road safety resolution. For those who might dismiss this as just another piece of paper condemned to sit on government shelves and gather dust, this a reminder of a few facts
  • Slovakia’s major road safety gain
    June 13, 2014
    Slovakia is having major success in cutting road deaths. A report from the European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) reveals that Slovakia has made the most progress in saving lives since an EU target to halve road deaths by 2020 was set four years ago. Official data shows that 26,025 people died as a result of road crashes in the EU in 2013, while 199,000 were seriously injured. There is concern that the numbers seriously injured in road crashes are not falling at same rate as deaths and there has now been
  • France shows improving road safety while Germany sees decline
    July 12, 2012
    A very different road safety picture is emerging in two European nations, France and Germany. In France, the road fatality rate fell 4.7% for the month of June 2012, compared with the same period in the previous year. Some 320 people were killed on French roads in June 2012. In May 2012, the road death rate in France was only 0.9% lower than for the same period in the previous year. But in April 2012 the road death rate dropped 22.2% compared with 2011, 9% in March and 25.3% in February.