The Borneo Post

Poor road maintenanc­e: Act before tragedy strikes — Lee Lam Thye

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KUALA LUMPUR: Recent fatal accidents caused by poor road maintenanc­e have sparked a call for authoritie­s to be more proactive.

Alliance for Safe Community chairman Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye said many have highlighte­d the need for mobile teams to identify potholes instead of waiting for members of the public to complain.

Instead, he said the cry for foresight and funds has fallen on deaf ears.

“When the rakyat pays their taxes, they are not interested in whose responsibi­lity it is to repair the roads. They simply want the roads to be made safe by the authoritie­s.

“After all, he who pays the piper calls the tune. To be proactive is to act before a tragedy strikes. To be reactive is to act after a tragedy has occurred.

“No amount of apology or compensati­on will be able to assuage the families of the victims concerned,” Lee said in a statement yesterday.

In stressing the urgency, Lee highlighte­d the tragedy of a 31year-old man who was killed when his motorcycle hit a bad patch in the road on Tuesday, and a 75-year-old man who died a few days earlier when he was thrown off his motorcycle after hitting a pothole.

He said these accidents occurred soon after Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Khairy Jamaluddin, fell of his bike last month.

Lee said that while the incident involving Khairy elicited a quick apology from the authoritie­s, he wondered whether a similar apology would be forthcomin­g for the families of recent victims. — Bernama

When the rakyat pays their taxes, they are not interested in whose responsibi­lity it is to repair the roads. They simply want the roads to be made safe by the authoritie­s. Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye

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