Accra Declaration calls on G8 leaders to Make Roads SafeAfrican Ministers of Transport and Health meeting in Ghana have adopted the ‘Accra Declaration’ which fully endorses the main recommendations of the Make Road Safe report of the Commission for Global Road Safety. (See PDF text below). The Declaration also calls on the G8 summit in Germany this June to “recognize the urgent need to improve road safety in Africa, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa; systematically include road safety in the work of the Africa Infrastructure Consortium; the Sub Saharan Africa Transport Policy Programme; and in the development assistance programmes of the G8 nations to ensure that new and improved roads in Africa do not increase road traffic death and injuries”
Ghana's Minister of Transportation being presented with a copy of the Make Roads Safe report during the Congress
Opening Ceremony of the 4th UN African Road Safety Congress held in Accra, Ghana. The Accra Declaration was adopted at the 4th UN African Road Safety Congress which was held in the Ghanaian capital on February 6-8 on the theme ‘Road Safety and the Millennium Developments Goals: Reducing the Rate of Accident Fatality by Half by 2015’. Attended by over 200 delegates and 25 Ministers from across the continent, the Congress was jointly organised by the Economic Commission from Africa (ECA) and the WHO with support from the FIA Foundation, SIDA (the Swedish Development Agency) and the UK’s Department for International Development. According to the ECA road crashes in Africa are commonly the second highest cause of death for the 5 to 44 age group and the economic cost is estimated at $10 billion or 2% of GNP. In some African countries the road traffic fatality rate is 100 deaths per 10,000 vehicles (compared with a rate in Sweden of just 1.3 per 10,000). On current trends the fatality rate is expected to increase by 80% by 2020. In a keynote address Ghana’s Deputy Minister of Transportation, Hon Magnus Opare-Asamoah stressed the importance of the target set by African Ministers of Transport in 2005 to reduce the rate of accident fatalities by 2015. The Minister also described the major efforts now being made in Ghana to meet this goal. The country’s National Road Safety Action Plan has started to achieve results with a 19% reduction in fatalities between 2004 and 2005. Noting that there is no family in Ghana or Africa which has not been affected by road traffic accidents, Minister Opare-Asamoah insisted that the forecast 80% increase in traffic fatalities in Africa “must not be a reality”. Download the Ministerial Declaration of Road Safety Conference Accra (116KB / .pdf) |
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Read this short booklet on Make Roads Safe which explains the aims of the campaign and why you should get involved. Read the Report
Read the Make Roads Safe report demanding urgent G8 action to tackle global road deaths. Watch the Film
Watch this short Make Roads Safe film to see the impact of road deaths in developing View film (Windows Media Player): Low-Res | Medium-Res | High-Res View film (QuickTime): |

