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Thursday, 8 June 2006, 02:15 GMT 03:15 UK

Action urged to stop road deaths

An upturned bus that fell off a bridge into the Chena river in the Indian state of Maharashtra, killing some 26 people Western governments are being urged to increase the amount of aid for reducing road accidents around the world.

The Commission for Global Road Safety says the problem, which kills 1.2m a year, is a "global epidemic", on a par with malaria and tuberculosis.

Failure to halt the number of road deaths could jeopardise key development goals, it says.

The Commission will present its findings to world leaders ahead of the G8 summit in St Petersburg in July.

The Commission's chairman, former Nato chief Lord Robertson, said global road safety needed to be on the agenda at future G8 summits.

REPORT'S FINDINGS

In Pictures: Road risks

"In 2005, millions of people and the leaders of the G8 responded to the call to Make Poverty History. Yet many of the gains for development...will be at risk if action is not taken to reverse the growing epidemic of road traffic death and injury, with its terrible human and economic cost."

Lord Robertson said "political leadership" from G8 members and a "significant increase in resources" were needed to make roads safer.

True cost

The findings have been published in a report, Make Roads Safe, released in London on Thursday.

Formula One driver Michael Schumacher, a member of the Commission, has given his backing to improved road safety.

"We need to make people aware of the real human cost of road traffic injuries across the developing world. Five hundred children are dying every day and thousands more are being disabled or injured," he said.

The report says more young men die on the roads than have died in recent wars - and only HIV and Aids take more lives.



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Related to this story:
How safe are your roads? (22 Nov 05 |  Africa )
Should seat belts be compulsory? (02 Apr 04 |  Africa )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Commission for Global Road Safety
Make Roads Safe campaign
G8 Summit 2006
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