By JULIA WALLACE
PHNOM PENH — In 2010, the Cambodian government
unveiled with great fanfare the country’s first traffic overpass. The $6
million project — lit with a futuristic blue neon swoosh — was intended to ease
congestion where a major boulevard that runs north-south through Phnom Penh
intersects with twin bridges that cross the Bassac River, just to the east.
Prime Minister Hun Sen called the Sky Bridge Project a “great achievement” and
proclaimed that it would end traffic problems in the area.
"Traffic police are widely known for setting up checkpoints to extract bribes over trivial offenses, while largely ignoring dangerous driving."
It wasn’t long before commuters discovered a catch: By
making it easier for motorists traveling north-south to keep going straight,
the new overpass made it impossible for them to turn left onto the intersecting
east-west road. The result is a mess. Now, drivers heading south who want to cross
the river must first take a right and drive away for several hundred meters and
then make a U-turn and head back. And motorists heading north are forced to
turn right, which necessarily takes them onto the bridges — meaning that they
are forced to cross the river, turn around and cross the river again.
Congestion in the area is worse than ever, and the traffic more dangerous.
While Cambodia is finally reaping some of the benefits
of economic growth — more people are buying cars, and more roads and bridges
are being built — urban planning and law enforcement haven’t caught up to this
reality. Neither has the ability of Cambodians to conceive of themselves as
belonging to a larger system.
Traffic police are widely known for setting up
checkpoints to extract bribes over trivial offenses, while largely ignoring
dangerous driving. Just 6 percent of commercial trucks on the roads — often
cast-offs from more developed countries that are jerry-rigged with random spare
parts — would pass existing safety inspections if those were properly
administered.
Many Cambodians, for their part, have been living for
so long in a society where traffic laws (and all other laws) are enforced
arbitrarily, that they have essentially given up thinking of these laws as
designed to serve the greater good.
Some 70 percent of Cambodian drivers purchase their
licenses. Many regard lane markers and traffic lights as mere suggestions. They
drive drunk, they drive down sidewalks, they drive on the wrong side of the
road. According to a study last year by Handicap International-Belgium, only 30
percent of Cambodian drivers even understand the concept of speed limits.
Traffic deaths have doubled since 2005. Nearly 2,000
Cambodians died on the roads last year, whereas land mines, still a favorite
cause of NGOs and international donors, kill around 40 people per year. Traffic
accidents are now the second-highest cause of death for the country’s 15
million people, after respiratory infections, according to the World Health
Organization. And accidents cost the economy $310 million per year, the
transportation minister said recently.
But Cambodians are starting to pay more attention to
the mayhem on their roads. Early last month, the country’s most famous male
vocalist, Khemarak Sereymon, was en route to a concert in the beach town of
Sihanoukville when a container truck hit his car, killing two members of his
entourage. Another two people died after a beer truck drove into the crash
scene. Shortly after the accident, he released a song, set to a Leonard Cohen
melody, pleading with drivers to be more careful. It was an immediate hit.
This came soon after another grisly accident, in Phnom
Penh. While fleeing the scenes of two previous accidents she had just caused, a
medical student in a Toyota Camry mowed down a group of young children
bicycling home from school, killing three. The woman’s father, a local
government official, defended her by saying that she was tired from excessive
studying.
Vigils were held near the crash site where the
children died, and a large procession of Buddhist monks, a hugely significant
moral force in Cambodian public life, marched the length of the city to mourn
them. Separately, a local grassroots movement has brought smaller groups of
monks to bless stretches of dangerous road with holy water.
There may be more dousing ahead. In a bid to be
released from jail, the hit-and-run driver has reportedly paid out more than
$20,000 to the families of the three children she killed — a common, if
illegal, practice that can lead prosecutors to drop criminal charges if they
believe the compensation is adequate. Her lawyer argued that she should be
freed because her crime was “not serious.”
Julia Wallace is managing editor of The Cambodia
Daily.
2 comments:
Poor planning or lack of it. The government should have planned a computer simulation a million times to see the effects of traffic. It's lack of leadership.
Attention!
A report from DAP news said.
លោក សយ សុភាព អគ្គនាយកមជ្ឈមណ្ឌលព័ត៌មានដើមអម្ពិល ដែលបានទៅលេងកម្សាន្តនៅរមណីយដ្ឋានធម្ម ជាតិ ជាមួយក្រុមគ្រួសារនាថ្ងៃទី១៣ ខែមេសា ឆ្នាំ២០១៣នេះ បានឲ្យដឹងថា ខណៈដែលរូបលោកកំពុងអង្គុយ ត្រាំទឹកលេងកម្សាន្តនោះ មានត្រីជាច្រើនបានហែលមកជញ្ជក់ និងបៀបជើងមានអារម្មណ៍ថាស្រួលខ្លួន និងប្រកប ដោយផាសុខភាព។ Ampil S-oy said, fish was sucking his dog dick, feeling good while he was taking a bath in the stream!!! why did he polute the environment in the river stream???
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