Tag: Road

  • Parliament amends road traffic law to protect the unborn child

    Parliament amends road traffic law to protect the unborn child

    Parliament, on Monday, 21 December 2020, passed the Road Traffic (Amendment) Bill.

    It is to ensure the protection of an unborn child on the country’s roads.

    It seeks to amend the Road Traffic Act, 2004 (Act 683) and prohibits acts constituting dangerous cycling and driving leading to the injury or death of unborn children and related matters.

    Under the bill, the law will recognize the loss of an unborn child as a distinct loss, not only an injury suffered by a pregnant woman.

    The Bill will also ensure that cyclists and drivers who cause death or injury to an unborn child through their actions are given harsher punishments while imposing on the driver, a duty to report to the police, accidents that result in the death of an unborn child as soon as possible.

    Also, under the new law, drivers and riders whose actions result in the death or injury of an unborn child will serve a minimum of three years and maximum of seven years in jail, if found guilty.

    The Bill, which was sponsored jointly by the Chairman of the Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee, Mr Ben Abdallah Banda, Kumbungu MP Ras Mubarak, Majority Leader Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, and Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu, will become the first-ever private members’ Bill to be passed by Parliament.

    This follows the adaptation of the proposal for the enactment of the Private Members’ Bill on July 19, 2020 under the leadership of Speaker Mike Oquaye.

    The adoption made the introduction of bills for consideration in Parliament no more a sole prerogative of the Executive through Ministers of State.

    This enables private citizens and individual MPs, who are not ministers of state, to initiate or introduce bills for consideration in parliament.

    According to a memorandum accompanying the Bill, it is for the protection of children, generally.

    For instance, Section 14 prohibits a person from driving a vehicle with a child of less than five years in the front seat of the vehicle.

    Source: Class FM

  • ELECTION 2020 : Kwesimintim Residents Block Roads Over Poor Roads

    ELECTION 2020 : Kwesimintim Residents Block Roads Over Poor Roads

    Residents of Whindo in the Kwesimintim Constituency in the Western Region Monday morning blocked roads to prevent officials of the Electoral Commission from assessing polling stations as they protest over the poor nature of their roads.

    An eyewitness Emmanuel Afful who reported from the constituency stated that the residents in July this year warned that they will not allow voting to go on in the constituency if their roads are not fixed.

    Afful reports that the timely arrival of personnel of the military and Police managed to disperse the crowd allowing the EC officials to move into the constituency.

    He adds that the residents began to run for their lives after they saw the heavily armed military and police personnel.

    Ghanaians are heading to the polls today Monday, December 7, 2020, to elect a President and 275 Parliamentarians.

    Over 17 million voters are expected to take part in the exercise. The figure is 2 million more than the number of voters who voted in the previous election in 2016.

    The electoral commission has said over 33,000 polling stations have been dedicated for the presidential and parliamentary polls.

    The race is largely between the incumbent President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo of the NPP and former leader John Dramani Mahama of the NDC. Ten other presidential candidates are contesting in the polls.

    Electoral materials have been dispatched to the various voting centres.

    The Electoral Commission says it aims to declare results within 24 hours.

    Ghanaweb