Desmond Tutu calls for action to Make Roads Safe 


18/11/2006 
Archbishop Desmond Tutu discusses the Make Roads Safe report with campaign coordinator Saul Billingsley 
Archbishop Desmond Tutu discusses the Make Roads Safe report with campaign coordinator Saul Billingsley

Archbishop Desmond Tutu has added his voice to the demand for international action to tackle road deaths.

In an interview filmed for the FIA Foundation, Tutu describes road traffic injuries as ‘a new health emergency for Africa’.

“Road deaths represent a huge burden on our health systems and an obstacle to our efforts to overcome poverty. It is the poorest people, working people, who are most affected by road crashes, often leaving families suddenly without a breadwinner. I call on Africa’s leaders and the world community to work together to make our roads safe”.

Desmond Tutu is the second Nobel Peace Prize winner, after Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, to support the Make Roads Safe campaign’s call for greater action on global road deaths. The Archbishop also welcomed the forthcoming first United Nations Global Road Safety Week, in April 2007, describing it as “a vital milestone in the global effort to raise awareness about the appalling human and economic impact of road crashes”.