Traffic fine increase gets green light
Wed, 9 December 2015 ppp
Taing Vida and Igor Kossov
Nearly a year after being signed into law, Cambodia’s new traffic code is just weeks from finally being enforced.
National
Police chief Neth Savoeun yesterday said that drivers have had plenty
of notice, and the time for implementation has come. As of January 1,
fines for speeding, disobeying traffic signs, drunk driving and other
infractions will increase fivefold.
Meanwhile,
police, who have been pledged $0.70 of every dollar in fines they
collect, are expected to step up efforts to stop and fine violators,
though authorities were quick to tamp down expectations.
“Though
we expect favourable results, it does not mean that [Traffic Law
compliance] is going to be 100 per cent,” said Run Roth Veasna, director
of the Interior Ministry’s department of regulation.
Veasna
said that resources will be shifted to allow “hundreds” of additional
traffic police to be newly deployed along national roads as well as
increase their presence in the capital.
And
despite concerns of potential shakedowns after the Interior Ministry’s
July announcement of its new payment scheme, officers will be lenient
when necessary, he insisted.
“We will look at mistakes that can be exempted or reduced.”
Veasna added that education about road safety and traffic laws is at a high level in the capital but lacking in rural areas.
“I
saw that communities in many provinces seem to have no idea about the
new law,” he said. “The government needs to address this.
I also think the government should consider reducing beer street ads along main roads and switch to educational signs.”
Multiple
Phnom Penh drivers interviewed yesterday said that increasing police
presence would make the most sense after dark, when traffic police are
largely absent.
“There’s
less traffic, but the traffic that’s there is more hazardous,” said
Mervin Chin, a longtime expat who drives a motorbike. “[There are] no
cops to regulate.”
But while drivers were largely supportive of the crackdown, there were elements of the law that prompted complaints.
Chea
San, a motorbike taxi driver living near Central Market, griped about
one newly established rule that will hit home, a fine for drivers who
don’t have a helmet for their passengers.
“It’s
expensive to buy an extra helmet,” he said. “And some clients refuse to
wear a helmet worn by many clients, because it’s not sanitary.”
The
Interior Ministry reported that 1,830 people died in traffic accidents
in the first nine months of 2015. In the same period last year, 1,734
people died.
However,
the total number of accidents went down from 3,638 to 3,505. About 93
per cent of all accidents are caused by human factors like speeding,
breaking the law and driving drunk.

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