Khaleej Times

Motorists slapped with 4.6M fines in Abu Dhabi last year

- Jasmine Al Kuttab

abu dhabi — Motorists in the emirate have received a whopping 4.6 million traffic fines last year, the Abu Dhabi Police revealed on Tuesday. Meanwhile, compared to 2016, accidents and serious injuries have dropped by 12 and four per cents respective­ly in 2017.

At a Press conference held in the traffic and patrol directorat­e, Brigadier Ali Khalfan Al Dhaheri, director of Abu Dhabi Police’s Central Operations Sector, said a total of 4.56million fines were issued against motorists last year, compared to 2016 which had 4,69million fines. “That’s a small decrease in fines, but as it resulted in a much lesser fatality rate, this can be seen as a positive step.”

Accidents also decreased by 12 per cent in 2017 compared to 2016, dropping from 1,740 to 1,533.

In 2017, 199 road fatalities occurred in Abu Dhabi, a 31 per cent drop from 2016’s 289 deaths. Deaths from run-over accidents in 2017 were 50, a 21 per cent decrease from 63 in 2016. Serious injuries in 2017 accidents were 149, compared to 159 in 2016, a decrease of four per cent.

The police announced that speeding tickets were also fewer compared to 2016, falling from 3.81million to 3.70million.

The Abu Dhabi Police achieved one of 2017’s crucial goals, noted Brigadier Al Dhaheri.

“The most important indicator here is that we stood at 5.7 road deaths per 100,000 inhabitant­s, less than the expected rate of 7.93 road deaths per 100,000. This is a huge reduction in fatalities.”

Speeding, sudden turns top list of violations

Speeding topped the list of traffic violations in 2017, at 79.8 per cent of the total fines. The young are also more reckless, as shown by the 44.8 per cent of all accidents committed by drivers aged 18-30.

The top causes of serious road accidents were: sudden manoeuvres, tailgating, not giving other road users and pedestrian­s enough space, breaking lane discipline, speeding and lack of attention behind the wheel. But again, compared to 2016, sudden manoeuvres dropped by 18 per cent, tailgating by 9 per cent, and pedestrian-related accidents by 15 per cent. Although fatalities, serious injuries and the overall traffic fines significan­tly decreased, negligence while driving and crossing the red light increased by three per cent.

“The results are all positive; the only negative that we have are negligence, mainly due to mobile phone use, as well as red light crossings, both increasing by three per cent in 2017 compared to 2016.”

The Abu Dhabi Police also revealed the most reccurring fines in 2017 : Not staying within lanes received the most fines, followed by random parking, driving an unregister­ed vehicle, driving without seatbelt and jaywalking by pedestrian­s. In 2016, it was driving without seatbelt that got the most fines.

Brigadier Al Dhaheri also stressed that the Abu Dhabi Police will continue to work on the 2016-20 traffic strategy, implemente­d by the Abu Dhabi Executive Council. “The strategic priority is traffic safety, divided into five categories: vehicle safety, engineerin­g works, education, training and awareness, emergency response and traffic enforcemen­t.”

The Abu Dhabi Police will continue to raise road safety awareness through programmes and platforms online and in real-time.

The force will also launch its smart app this year. “In 2017, we focused heavily on raising traffic safety awareness to reduce the number of road accidents and fatalities. That is what we will continue to do.”

 ?? Photo by Ryan Lim ?? Awareness campaigns have brought down the rate of road fatalities in the emirate. —
Photo by Ryan Lim Awareness campaigns have brought down the rate of road fatalities in the emirate. —

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