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463 die in New Year crashes


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463 die in New Year crashes

By The Nation

 

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A total of 463 people died and 3,892 others were wounded in 3,791 road accidents over the New Year holiday's so-called seven dangerous days (December 27-January 2), the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department’s Road Safety Centre announced.

 

This year's figures saw a decease in crashes and injuries and an increase in deaths while drink driving was cited as the main cause of crashes, Deputy Interior Minister Suthee Makboon told the media. Last year's New Year reported 423 deaths and 4,005 injuries in 3,841 road crashes.

 

The southern province of Nakhon Si Thammarat had the most crashes with 118 cases and the highest casualties at 137 injuries, while the northeastern province of Nakhon Ratchasima had the highest fatalities with 25 deaths. Only Tak, Phrae, Satun and Samut Songkhram reported no deaths in road accidents. 

 

Drink driving was blamed for 40 per cent followed by speeding with 28 per cent, Suthee said. These two causes, combined with another factor of motorists suddenly cutting in front of other vehicles, were all regarded as driver behaviour so the authorities would campaign for driving discipline and road safety consciousness, he said.

 

Accidents involving motorcycles accounted for 80 per cent of crashes and 28 per cent occurred from 4pm to 8pm, he added.

 

On January 2 alone there were 369 road accidents killing 44 people and wounding 391 others, Suthee said. Ayutthaya had the day's most crashes with 17 incidents and most injuries with 18. On January 2, officers at 2,052 checkpoints recorded around 182,000 traffic violations. This included 41,473 motorists who failed to produce a driver's licence and 46,284 motorcyclists were stopped for riding without helmets, he said.

 

National Council for Peace and Order spokeswoman Colonel Sirichan Nga-thong said 3,859 motorcycles, 1,305 automobiles and 8,312 driver's licences had been seized from drink drivers during the seven days.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/breakingnews/30361551

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-01-03
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3 hours ago, Lacessit said:

My trip back to Chiang Mai from Chiang Rai yesterday had at least a dozen occasions of drivers overtaking on blind curves. It's almost like they have a death wish.

Frequently on these northern roads I find this to be the most dangerous highway in the district. Madness at every moment. There is no almost about it, a death wish it has to be.

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8 hours ago, Lacessit said:

Hardly surprising. My trip back to Chiang Mai from Chiang Rai yesterday had at least a dozen occasions of drivers overtaking on blind curves. It's almost like they have a death wish.

Could it be they had a "sex wish" to get back home to make more Thais to make up for the losses on the road?

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14 hours ago, mark131v said:

A Boeing 747 a week, week on week year on year

 

Darwinism in action but good to see they are still making excuses rather than trying to sort it out, speaks volumes....

 

Yes If a 747 crashed every week there'd be a hue and cry but one here, and a couple there on the roads?Nah,roll out a new "campaign" and that'll fix it.No wonder there's so many be-medalled chaps around fighting all these "campaigns"

 

Edited by findlay13
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