City
Epaper

Roundtable calls for harsh measures to prevent road deaths in Bulgaria

By IANS | Updated: December 10, 2024 07:25 IST

Sofia, Dec 10 A roundtable discussion called for tougher measures to combat serious road accidents and reduce casualties ...

Open in App

Sofia, Dec 10 A roundtable discussion called for tougher measures to combat serious road accidents and reduce casualties in Bulgaria.

The event was organised on Monday by two Bulgarian non-governmental organisations, the "European Center for Transport Policies" and "Angels on the Road," Xinhua news agency reported.

European Commission data shows that Bulgaria had the highest road accident fatality rate in the European Union last year, with 82 deaths per million population.

A man, introduced simply as "Philip's father," shared his personal tragedy, recounting how his child was killed by a car last September. He identified recurring factors for high road accident fatalities such as significant speeding, alcohol or drug use, gross disregard for traffic laws, inexperienced young drivers with powerful cars, and poor road infrastructure.

Officials at the discussion noted that since August 2023, Bulgaria has implemented measures allowing the state to confiscate vehicles from drunk or drugged drivers. This policy has shown a positive preventive effect.

Peter Petrov, a member of parliament (MP), cited data from the Interior Ministry, revealing that from August 2023 to August 2024, cases of drivers caught with over 1.2 per mille of alcohol dropped by 545, while cases involving drug use decreased by 901 compared to the previous year. Road fatalities during this period decreased by 64, or 11 per cent.

Another MP, Kalin Stoyanov, who served as Interior Minister until August, praised the effectiveness of vehicle confiscation as a deterrent and supported stricter sanctions.

Acting Prosecutor General Borislav Sarafov endorsed the confiscation policy and called for access to traffic data from mobile operators for investigative purposes in traffic accidents. He explained that the current Bulgarian Criminal Procedure Code restricts such data collection to serious intentional crimes.

Sarafov also advocated for supervising prosecutors to press charges for intentional crimes in cases involving drivers under the influence of alcohol or drugs.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Churchgate-Marine Lines Local Train Services Disrupted as Cloth Gets Entangled in OHE Amid Heavy Rains

BusinessCulture Circle Fights the Fakes: Becomes India’s First Luxury Marketplace to Offer Dual Authentication with CheckCheck

EntertainmentMansi Sharma from Badi Haveli Ki Chhoti Thakurain believes, 'success doesn’t come overnight'

BusinessCoal India posts 12 pc rise in Q4 net profit at Rs 9,604 cr; declares dividend of Rs 5.15 per share

NationalCoal India posts 12 pc rise in Q4 net profit at Rs 9,604 cr; declares dividend of Rs 5.15 per share

International Realted Stories

InternationalFrance's FM Jean-Noel Barrot calls for restraint amid India-Pakistan tensions

InternationalNo impunity for terrorists: Rishi Sunak justifies India's 'Operation Sindoor'

International"Terror attack of April 22nd was escalation for us...": Foreign Secretary Misri's briefing to UNSC member states

InternationalUK's terrorism charges against seven Iranian nationals baseless: Tehran

International"India is justified in striking terrorist infrastructure": Rishi Sunak