Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Traffic Safety Documentary Film Demonstrates in Cambodia


Phnom Penh, Cambodia (23 February 2011)
Mrs. Michelle Yeoh is taking traffic safety documentary film with Sampov Meas primary school students and teachers 
 An Internationally renewed actor and star of famous movies including “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dagon”, “Memoirs of a Geisha”, “Sunshine” and the James Bond movie “Tomorrow Never Dies” and in addition, has been the global ambassador for the Make Roads Safe campaign is Mrs. Michelle Yeoh, who has arrived in Cambodia to take a traffic safety documentary film in order to promote traffic safety awareness and traffic safety knowledge in Cambodia as well as the world.

The traffic safety documentary demonstrates the burden of traffic fatalities in Cambodia, where road traffic crashes were the largest non-communicable disease burden in 2010 and it also examines many interventions being implemented to combat this public health crisis.

As recently speech of H.E. Sar Kheng, Minister of the Interior and Deputy Prime Minister said that, “In 2010, 1,709 Cambodians to road traffic crashes which is an amount we cannot afford this level of loss.” Adding to that, “road traffic crashes are an enormous burden on country’s economic, health care and social welfare system, in addition to the extreme suffering of the victims and their families.”

“Over the past few years, I have traveled in many countries and seen the terrible impact that a lack of basic road safety can have on people’s lives. A child is killed or maimed on the roads every thirty seconds. These tragedies are so sad, and so unnecessary, because we have the ability to prevent this. It is time for the talking stop and it is time for real action to make road safe,” said Mrs. Michelle Yeoh.

She noted that her visit to Cambodia is aims to show that these deaths and injuries can be prevented. “They can be prevented by simple acts like always wearing a motorcycle helmet.”

This year, she led the campaign’s “Call for a Decade of Action for Road Safety”, which resulted in the UN General Assembly proclaiming the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020. “As we launch the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety, we should be more determined than ever to keep everyone, and especially our children, safe from harm,” he said.

Mrs. Yeoh came to Sampov Meas Primary School, which is a target school for the Cambodia Helmet Vaccine Initiative’s Helmets for kid program to take a documentary film featuring on traffic safety on February 22. This program also combined helmet donation and road safety education. At Sampov Meas Primary School, she trains students and teachers on proper helmet use and safe road behavior and demonstrated traffic lesson on the school’s interactive traffic safety corner.

Mr. Saul Billingsley, Deputy Director General of the FIA Foundation said that this documentary for the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety will highlight not only the tremendous burden of road traffic crashes, but also the inspirational stories of people who are working to make road safer.

In filming the documentary, she interviewed high-ranking government officials, visited road traffic crash victims in hospitals, and participating in school-based road safety education programs. She also met H.E Sak Kheng, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the interior and H.E. Tam Iv Tek, Minister of Public Works and Transport, to advocate for quick passage of a law mandating helmets for motorcycle passengers.

Currently, the law only requires motorcycle drivers to wear helmets. However, helmets have been proven to reduce like likelihood of death from a road traffic crash by 42 percent and the likelihood of injury by 69 percent.

According to preliminary studies from use helmet observation conducted in January 2011, helmet use is extremely low among motorbike passengers, who are not required by law to wear helmets. In Phnom Penh, passenger helmet use rates were recorded between 8 to 12 percent during the daytime and between 6 to 8 percent at night.

Miss Mirjam Sidik, Excutive Director of AIP (Asia Injury Prevent Foundation), said that, “we see helmets as a vaccine against traumatic brain injuries, which are the leading cause of death from motorbike crashes.”

“We hope this documentary inspires viewers to encourage their families and loved ones to wear helmets and serves as a catalyst to change social norms.”

The Cambodia Helmet Vaccine Initiative is a coalition comprised of AIP foundation, Ministry of Interior, National Road Safety Committee, ANZ Royal Bank (Cambodia) Ltd., and Total Cambodge, which was launched in 2010 in Phnom Penh. Since then, the initiative has implemented school-based programs, public awareness campaigns.

By Sok Lak (Vol. 5, Issue 8, SEAW)

No comments:

Post a Comment