EACC, NTSA to intensify road safety enforcement during holiday season
A multi agency road safety clinics within Nairobi City. Photo: NTSA/Twitter.
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The government has rolled out a nationwide traffic crackdown as part of enhanced security measures during the festive season, aimed at reducing road accidents and curbing corruption on major highways.
Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen says the
National Transport and Safety Authority, working with the Traffic Police
Department, has launched a coordinated operation targeting high-risk road
corridors and major urban routes.
The operation is being implemented in line with resolutions
of the National Council on the Administration of Justice and includes the
deployment of officers from the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to
monitor enforcement and deter bribery.
Murkomen says the measures will involve joint multi-agency
enforcement, increased police visibility and the use of both physical and
electronic deterrence tools, with mobile courts to be deployed where necessary
to ensure instant prosecution of offenders.
Motorists have been advised to plan their journeys in
advance, adjust travel schedules and use alternative routes to ease congestion,
particularly for travellers heading to Western and Nyanza regions.
Those travelling from Nairobi to Western Kenya and Nyanza
have been encouraged to use the Nairobi–Suswa–Narok route as an alternative to
the Mai Mahiu escarpment, while motorists heading through the Central region
have been advised to consider the Nairobi–Nyeri–Nyahururu–Nakuru route.
The crackdown also comes amid a wider festive season
operation that includes a parallel campaign by the National Authority for the
Campaign Against Alcohol and Drug Abuse against illicit brews and drugs, which
authorities say contribute to road crashes and insecurity.
At the same time, the EACC has warned motorists against
offering bribes to evade traffic laws, cautioning that the practice endangers
lives.
Speaking in Makueni County, EACC regional director for
Western Kenya Eric Ngumbi said drivers must stop endangering passengers by bribing
enforcement officers to overlook traffic offences.
“Drivers must take responsibility for the passengers they
carry. There is no need to overload vehicles, break traffic rules and then
offer bribes to evade the law, only to end up killing people. This habit of
driving people to their deaths must stop,” Ngumbi said.
Ngumbi revealed that the commission will conduct
surveillance on major roads countrywide to arrest both motorists and traffic
officers found engaging in bribery.
He also called on the public to play an active role in
promoting road safety by speaking out against reckless driving.
“Even as agencies work to reduce accidents, members of the
public have a critical role to play. Do not allow a driver who is driving
dangerously to continue with the journey,” he added.
The warning by the Commission comes after Chief Justice
Martha Koome announced that the Judiciary will deploy mobile courts on major
highways, working alongside the National Police Service, NTSA and EACC to
enforce traffic laws through arrests and instant prosecution during the holiday
season.
Authorities say the combined measures are aimed at stemming
the rising number of road accidents, which have in recent months claimed
thousands of lives across the country.

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