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Songkran Death Toll Surges To 418


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Songkran Death Toll Surges To 418

By Jintamas Saksornchai, Staff Reporter

 

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Four people were injured Sunday in a car wreck in Suphan Buri province. Photo: Matichon

 

BANGKOK — Speeding edged out intoxication to claim the most lives during the “dangerous days” of Songkran this year, which ended after 418 people died on the roads over seven days, according to officials.

 

Driving over the speed limit came from behind to surpass drunk driving as the No. 1 cause of death. Speeding-related deaths accounted for 27.7 percent of fatalities, while drunk driving fell to No. 2, cited in 25.7 percent of road deaths, according to numbers from the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department.

 

Full story: http://www.khaosodenglish.com/news/crimecourtscalamity/calamity/2018/04/18/songkran-death-toll-surges-to-418/

 
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-- © Copyright Khaosod English 2018-04-18
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3 minutes ago, Just1Voice said:

The thing of it is, the numbers they give are bogus. They only count the ones who died at the scene of the accident, but don't add those who died in the hospital from the accident.   So, the actual numbers are higher than what they report.

 

I like your dog

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Driving over the speed limit came from behind to surpass drunk driving as the No. 1 cause of death. Speeding-related deaths accounted for 27.7 percent of fatalities, while drunk driving fell to No. 2, cited in 25.7 

 

And what caused the other 73,4 % :sad:

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10 minutes ago, Just1Voice said:

The thing of it is, the numbers they give are bogus. They only count the ones who died at the scene of the accident, but don't add those who died in the hospital from the accident.   So, the actual numbers are higher than what they report.

1

Wouldn't be surprised if next year they'll order the body snatchers to get the semi-corpses a couple of hundred meters away from the scene so they can massage the numbers down. I'd wager the real number is about 10x of the reported. Not that it makes even a notch in the human density in Thailand.

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418 die in Songkran road carnage

By The Nation

 

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This Songkran's casualties of 418 deaths and 3,897 injuries in 3,724 road accidents compared with last year’s figures of 390 deaths and 3,808 injuries in 3,690 road crashes, the Road Safety Centre said on Wednesday.

 

Most road carnage this Songkran stemmed from drink-driving (40 per cent) and speeding (26 per cent) and 80 per cent of accidents involved motorcycles and 65 per cent took place on straight roads, Deputy Interior Minister Suthee Makboon told the media.

 

During the seven-day monitoring period for Songkran (April 11-17), Nakhon Ratchasima, the “gateway to the northeast”, reported the highest accumulated death toll (20) while the northern province of Chiang Mai had the highest total injuries (142) and crashes (133), he said. Only four provinces of Ranong, Samut Songkhram, Nong Khai and Nong Bua Lamphu reported no road accident deaths during Songkran, he added.

 

On Tuesday, the last day of the crash-monitoring period, 307 accidents took place killing 26 people and wounding 336 others and with speeding blamed for 28 per cent of accidents, drink-driving for 26 per cent and suddenly cutting in front of other vehicle for 19 per cent.

 

On Tuesday, officers manning 2,029 checkpoints nationwide arrested 146,589 motorists, most of whom were motorcyclists and their passengers not wearing crash helmets (39,572 cases) and those not in possession of their driver’s licence (37,779).

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30343403

 
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19 minutes ago, chrisinth said:

59.7 is the average from 418 deaths over the 7 day period of Songkran.

 

What is the daily national average for Thailand?

61 according to this article from Nov 2017

 

but WHO figures from 2015 put it at 66

http://www.searo.who.int/thailand/areas/roadsafety/en/

 

So yes, below average for the 'official' figures; which some suggest do not include people who die  in hospital from road accidents.

 

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2 hours ago, Just1Voice said:

The thing of it is, the numbers they give are bogus. They only count the ones who died at the scene of the accident, but don't add those who died in the hospital from the accident.   So, the actual numbers are higher than what they report.

 

Check again.  The number ARE updated with those that die later.  Day one is an example.  Initially reported as 39 is now updated to 42.  There is a note on the bottom of the chart confirming this.

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3 hours ago, wanderluster said:

Managed to squeek under the 60 per day mark. Congradulations are in order. I think that all the top officials should get a big bonus check and a photo op.

i am sure they will manage that 

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3 minutes ago, HHTel said:

Check again.  The number ARE updated with those that die later.  Day one is an example.  Initially reported as 39 is now updated to 42.  There is a note on the bottom of the chart confirming this.

Then they have changed things, as 3 years ago a family member who is a Lt., with Traffic Division RTP, flat out told me they only count the ones dead at the scene.

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You can speak to two members of the RTP and likely get different info from each.  Very common as they can't admit to not knowing.  From experience, I've had to approach more than one officer before getting one to confirm what I know was the truth.  All about 'losing face'.  However, we live with the shortcomings here.

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Now someone makes a mistake...we are already by an average of 60 per day...(71 during the year)! What is true? Are Thailand roads on the way to becoming safe?

Edited by peperobi
Small mistake!
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15 minutes ago, Just1Voice said:

Then they have changed things, as 3 years ago a family member who is a Lt., with Traffic Division RTP, flat out told me they only count the ones dead at the scene.

They still do it, the real amount will be never told to the public. Some people died even few weeks after the accident.

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3 hours ago, wanderluster said:

Managed to squeek under the 60 per day mark. Congradulations are in order. I think that all the top officials should get a big bonus check and a photo op.

Common alcohol. You can do better than that! A bit more effort required

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3 hours ago, jenny2017 said:

Driving over the speed limit came from behind to surpass drunk driving as the No. 1 cause of death. Speeding-related deaths accounted for 27.7 percent of fatalities, while drunk driving fell to No. 2, cited in 25.7 

 

And what caused the other 73,4 % :sad:

Uh....27.7 + 25.7 = 53.4

100 - 53.4 = 46.6%

 

Not a math major eh? Neither was I.

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3 hours ago, jenny2017 said:

Driving over the speed limit came from behind to surpass drunk driving as the No. 1 cause of death. Speeding-related deaths accounted for 27.7 percent of fatalities, while drunk driving fell to No. 2, cited in 25.7 

 

And what caused the other 73,4 % :sad:

The usual complete stupidity demonstrated on a daily basis. HTH :jap:

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3 hours ago, Just1Voice said:

The thing of it is, the numbers they give are bogus. They only count the ones who died at the scene of the accident, but don't add those who died in the hospital from the accident.   So, the actual numbers are higher than what they report.

 

I mentioned here already that UN estimates more than 35.000/year.

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54 minutes ago, peperobi said:

Now someone makes a mistake...we are already by an average of 60 per day...(71 during the year)! What is true? Are Thailand roads on the way to becoming safe?

Yes ! But only during Songkran  ;)

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