Mobile phone use banned in UN vehicles

19 May 2010 – All drivers of United Nations vehicles are now banned from using their mobile telephones to send text messages while driving under a new measure unveiled today by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to try to save lives and promote road safety.

“We are seeing a major  challenge emerging – driver distraction, mainly by using mobile phones,” Mr. Ban told reporters in New York has he helped launch a global campaign to improve road safety by ending habits that distract the drivers attention.

“Studies indicate that using a mobile phone increases the risk of a crash four fold. And yet in some countries up to 90 per cent of people use mobile phones while driving,” the Secretary-General said.

He announced he was issuing an administrative instruction banning all drivers of UN vehicles from texting whilst driving.

An estimated 1.2 million people die as a result of car crashes across the world every year and about 50 million others are injured, Secretary General Ban said, noting that 90 percent of the fatalities happen in low and middle income countries.

“I want every driver in the world to get the message: Texting while driving kills. No SMS is worth a life,” the Secretary-General implied.

Road accidents have become the leading cause of death among young people between the ages of 15 and 29, Mr. Ban said, adding that speeding, driving while drunk and failing to use seat belts, child restraints and motorcycle helmets increased the risk of death in the event of a crash.

“A culture in which driving while distracted – on the phone, or text messaging – is unacceptable. Unacceptable in the eyes of the public, and the law” the Secretary-General said.

In late March, the UN General Assembly proclaimed the period from 2011 to 2020 as the Decade of Action for Road Safety to spur global and national efforts to halt or reverse the increasing trend in injuries and road traffic deaths around the world.

In the resolution, Member States also requested the World Health Organization (WHO), in cooperation with other partners, to prepare a plan of action to guide efforts during the Decade, which was requested at the First Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety, held in Moscow last year.

Mobile phone usage, while driving is illegal in most countries and states including Western Australia and taught as a basic skill in Driving Schools Perth.

The full story can be found at http://www.un.org

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