The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Calls for stricter laws against drunk drivers

-

KUALA LUMPUR: The increasing number of deaths caused by drunk driving recently has prompted calls for stricter laws and heavier punishment­s against transgress­ors.

Currently, death caused by individual­s driving under the influence of alcohol is charged under the Road Transport Act 1987, which carries a maximum jail term of 10 years and a fine up to RM20,000.

Criminolog­y expert Datuk Shahul Hamid Abd Rahim said such irresponsi­ble behaviour by drunk drivers warrants for drastic measures to be taken against offenders, as the existing law did not seem to be effective.

“There are drivers who violated the law even during the implementa­tion of the Movement Control Order (MCO). We should not give a second chance to these offenders,” he told Bernama.

Shahul Hamid welcomed the government’s proposal to amend the Road Transport Act on laws related to driving under the influence, and urged for it to be expedited.

Meanwhile, a senior lecturer from the Internatio­nal Islamic University Malaysia’s (IIUM) Sociology and Anthropolo­gy Department, Dr Noor Azlan Mohd Noor, proposed for ad hoc punishment­s to be meted out against offenders while waiting for the existing laws to be amended.

“There is a possibilit­y that many more will become victims to drunk drivers, as such, before a stricter

Act is implemente­d, authoritie­s should take appropriat­e action against the perpetrato­rs,” he said.

Noor Azlan also called for a fair and impartial mandatory penalty to be imposed against individual­s who committed the offence to serve as a deterrent to others.

He said awareness over the matter should also be given to new drivers when obtaining their driver’s licence.

According to police statistics, a total of 637 deaths were caused by road crashes involving intoxicate­d drivers from 2014 to 2018.

Yesterday, the media reported that a briefing session would be held at the Transport Ministry with the Road Transport Department on June 1 to look into and review all proposals regarding amendments to the Road Transport Act 1987.

On May 3, police personnel manning a Covid-19 roadblock at the Kajang South toll plaza along the Kajang-Seremban Expressway (LEKAS) was ploughed to death by a four-wheel-drive vehicle driven by a drunk man.

On May 23, a man driving a fourwheel-drive was charged with ramming into hawker stalls and bystanders in Pekan, and early investigat­ions revealed that the suspect was intoxicate­d during the incident.

On Tuesday, a man died after his car was crashed into by another car being driven against traffic at Jalan Pintasan Kuantan, Pahang, with the driver of the second car believed to be intoxicate­d during the incident. – Bernama

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia