Skip to main content

UN campaign starts on World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims

#moments2live4 supports those involved in road safety and runs until 12 December.
By Adam Hill November 20, 2023 Read time: 1 min
World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims started on 19 November (image © Shem Oirere)

To mark World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims on 19 November, the United Nations Road Safety Fund has launched the third edition of its global #moments2live4 campaign.

It runs until 12 December and calls on people "to celebrate the frontline workers who act each day to prevent road crashes, care for traffic victims and advocate for everyone’s right to a safer journey". The aim is to boost road safety.

“This #moments2live4 campaign celebrates the everyday heroes making our streets safer from traffic officers to healthcare workers, vehicle inspectors to urban planners,” says Nneka Henry, head of the UN Road Safety Fund.

Every 24 seconds someone dies on the world's roads, with over 90% of fatalities taking place in low- and middle-income countries, the Fund says in a statement: "Globally, we face a critical opportunity to support those working for their communities to stop more deaths on the road."

The Fund has produced a film, On the Frontline: Road Safety in Kenya, which tracks the work of "local road safety heroes" in two projects being led by UN-Habitat and UN Environment Programme.

Related Content

  • UK link complete ahead of schedule
    December 17, 2021
    A key UK road link is complete ahead of schedule.
  • Are EVs too quiet to be safe?
    June 12, 2019
    Concern is being expressed in the UK over the safety of low noise, electric vehicles. Children and those with poor sight are particularly at risk from electric vehicles, which are much quieter in operation than conventional vehicles powered by internal combustion engines.
  • French bypass project approved
    January 3, 2022
    A French bypass project has been approved for the city of Rouen.
  • Road safety: time for results on reducing crashes
    May 8, 2019
    The World Health Organization’s 2018 Global Road Safety Status Report – the definitive international road safety performance benchmark – paints an alarming picture, just two years from the United Nations’ target to cut fatal traffic injuries by 2020, and confirms that road fatalities represent one of the worst public health epidemics in history. “Think about it. In the Plague of Justinian in 541 and 542 AD, approximately 100,000,000 people died, making this event recognised as the worst epidemic in hist