For several months now, there has been a noticeable effort by
the Transport ministry to erect footbridges on key roads around Nairobi.
From
the Thika-Nairobi highway to Mbagathi Way, contractors have for several
months stayed on site erecting the multimillion-shilling facilities.
This
year alone, on Thika-Nairobi thoroughfare footbridges have been
installed at Survey of Kenya (just before the junction to the Kenya
School of Monetary Studies), the Garden Estate junction and at Witeithie
and Mang’u late last year.
Ideally, such developments
should ensure pedestrian safety in a city where the simple act of
crossing the road is to gamble with ones life.
The
reality, however, is that most pedestrians will continue chancing their
lives on the busy roads as the multimillion-shilling safety facilities
are anything but safe.
Hawkers,
street families and motorcycle taxi (boda boda) operators have taken
over. Today, one is just as likely to get knocked down on footbridges as
the pedestrian crossing the road below.
And if they
are lucky to make it from one end to the other unscathed, they’ll have
to hop and skip over hawkers wares, making what should be an enjoyable
exercise stressful.
The invasion of these crucial pedestrian safety facilities risks
making nonsense of the multimillion-shilling road investments already
put up as well as others in the pipeline.
Hawkers who spoke to the Business Daily
claimed economic hardship had pushed them to take up sidewalks and
footbridges to maximise sales. Because of high human traffic, they said
footbridges are prime locations.
Mary Mburu, who sells
wares such face masks and peanuts on the Mutindwa footbridge, said she
was unable to afford Sh5,000 to run a stall within the adjacent estate.
“Evenings
when workers are leaving offices have the highest potential on
footbridges,” said Musili Musyoka, a hawker who deals in women clothes.
On a good day he makes Sh800 sales.
Like Mary, he was adamant that he cannot afford Sh20,000 each month to pay for a stall in the city centre.
For
the boda boda operators, the footbridges are hard-to-resist ‘highways’
that substantially cut their travel time. In a city of perpetual
gridlocks where their services are highly sought after by those keen on
arriving at their destinations in time, they said the footbridges are
come in handy.
“The footbridge is a short cut to the
other side of the road and I also avoid getting stuck in traffic,” said a
boda boda rider at the Cabanas crossing who sought anonymity.
But it is not just boda boda operators and hawkers that
pedestrians have to consider. Street families have completely turned
some of the facilities into their homes and reports anyone who walks
into their ‘territory’ is attacked. Muggers too have turned others into
dens.
Pedestrians have particularly learnt to give the
footbridges around Muthurwa market and the Machakos country bus station a
wide berth.
Besides
risking an arm and leg on footbridges, pedestrians have also displaced
from sidewalks by small traders including motor vehicle garages and
furniture shops, especially in areas such as Buruburu, Umoja, South B,
Lang’ata, Imara Daima, South C. They are forced to fight for space with
vehicles on roads.
Boda bodas and matatus also use the pedestrian walkways in an attempt to beat traffic jam.
According to a recent study, the pedestrian safety problems starts from the infrastructure design.
The joint study by the NTSA and the National Police
Service estimated 35 percent of road traffic deaths in Nairobi occur
within 20 metres of matatu stages, highlighting infrastructure design
flaws around these sites as well as rogue behaviour by drivers and lack
of safety consciousness among pedestrians.
“This staggering number is a call for action,” the report urged.
“Developing
a better understanding of how to regulate and enforce matatu flows, and
driver and pedestrian behaviour, while at the same time improving the
infrastructure at these sites will be required to guide policy action”.
Indeed, a spot check of the matatu termini in Nairobi shows that
many pickup and drop-off points around the city lack safety features
such as designated crossing points or protected sidewalks — exposing
pedestrians to harm or even death.
A recent study
conducted at Kenyatta National Hospital dubbed the Pattern of Pedestrian
Injuries in the City of Nairobi urged new thinking where pedestrian
crossing will become part of road designs.
It called for a shift from the vehicle-focused designed to a more inclusive vehicle and pedestrians’ model.
“Seventy percent of pedestrians were hit while
crossing the road, 10.8 percent while standing by the road and 8.1
percent while walking along the road with the highest proportion of
pedestrian crashes occurring on Saturdays (25.5 percent) and Sundays
(16.7 percent) ,” observed the study.
Careless speeding
The
researchers noted that footbridges had not improved road safety but
perpetuate a culture of careless speeding and driver negligence.
Their
study revealed that in Nairobi , traffic accident deaths and injuries
are concentrated between 5am and 8am and between 5pm and 11pm,
representing 53 percent (deaths) and 50 percent (injuries) of the total.
The deadliest times for pedestrians are at night between 7pm and midnight when 41 percent of pedestrian deaths occur.
Meanwhile,
as the footbridges and sidewalks invasion continues, data by National
Transport Safety Authority (NTSA) shows that pedestrian deaths continue
to rise. Last year 1,390 fatalities were registered, a 15.4 percent
increase from the previous year. This was the single highest number of
deaths by type of victims since the agency started tracking accidents.
With
walking as the main mode of transport in Nairobi, especially among the
poor, the study findings and NTSA data shift focus to improving safety
features at the matatu termini and city roads.
No comments :
Post a Comment