UAE | Traffic and Transport
Abu Dhabi pedestrians pay price for motorists' recklessness
At least six fatalities have been reported in a spate of accidents over the past two days in the capital city alone. Most of the victims were pedestrians hit while trying to cross the roads.
Abu Dhabi: At least six fatalities have been reported in a spate of accidents over the past two days in the capital city alone.
Most of the victims were pedestrians hit while trying to cross the roads, say police.
A 23-year-old Emirati biker was killed on the spot early on Saturday.
"The accident happened at about 5am on the Airport Road-Al Nasr Street junction. The biker was speeding. He jumped the red signal and hit a mini bus. The bike was almost cut in half and the man was crushed to death," a rescue official who attended the case told Gulf News.
The bus rolled over after the collision and one person was badly injured.
At Saadiyat Island, a 36-year-old Indian man died around 7pm. "A loader and a mini bus collided. It is believed that the man jumped off the bus to avoid getting hurt. But he was hit by the truck as he did so and died instantly," said a traffic police official.
At 8.40pm on the same night, a 39-year-old Indian man was killed in Musaffah while trying to cross the road.
"The man was run over by a car driven by a 19-year-old UAE national." There was no pedestrian crossing as it was a highway, added the official.
In another accident on Saturday morning, four vehicles collided on Fourth Street. A UAE national was badly injured.
A senior rescue official said that several pedestrians were run over during the weekend. Two pedestrians - one Indian and one Chinese - were killed in Al Mafraq and one Pakistani man was killed in Tarif.
On Thursday, one man was killed in an accident involving three cars near Al Raha mall.
Workshop
At a recent workshop, Abu Dhabi Police warned that road fatalities in the UAE were assuming alarming proportions. Studies have shown that high speed is the main cause of human fatalities and property loss in the UAE. Notably, most of the victims were found to be young UAE nationals.
While 878 traffic deaths were recorded in 2006, the death toll rose to 1,056 in 2007, marking a 16.8 per cent hike.
The disturbing figure led to the amendment of the Federal Traffic Law imposing hefty penalties and black points on the driver's licence.
Share this article
More from UAE Traffic and Transport
More from UAE
Popular in UAE

-
Have your say
Living in untidy homes
Do you think that people who live in untidy homes have bad character?
Latest news
- Fog sweeps the UAE
- Emirati students in US set to rise
- No friends of mother Earth
- Tussle on for tertiary students
- Faded parking lines pose a problem
- UAE to announce H1N1 vaccination campaign
- Focus on best methods of crime investigation
- Benefits of pill-sized camera displayed
- Prosecutions need to adopt new technologies
- Big decline in robberies in Dubai
- Ministry to shut down typing centres
- Car stickers to identify new drivers on road
- So what will it take to float Gulf News' boat?
- Arab world's future is with solar energy
- Desalination faces 'severe' challenges
Community Reports
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas
-
Community report: Doing their bit for poor children
A group of students takes concrete action to raise funds for Dubai Cares
-
Surprising truth of 'abandoned cars'
An Abu Dhabi resident believes that some mechanics are using parking spaces as rent-free workshops


