
The National Road Safety Authority (NRSA) has declared a major policy shift to address Ghana's escalating road safety crisis, which officials describe as a public health emergency with fatalities now exceeding those recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic. Director-General Abraham Amaliba announced a series of aggressive reforms aimed at curbing road carnage, headlined by the introduction of 'Traffic Tech,' an automated technology-driven enforcement system designed to monitor speed violations and traffic law compliance. Speaking during a visit to the Upper East Region, Mr. Amaliba also confirmed the implementation of Legislative Instrument (LI) 2519, which will mandate vehicle owners to subscribe to towing services to eliminate the hazard of stationary vehicles on highways. These reforms, set for a strategic rollout beginning in 2024 with full automation anticipated by 2027, represent a transition from simple public education to technology-led enforcement.
While national figures remain a concern, recent data from the Upper East Region offers a glimmer of hope, showing a significant decline in road traffic casualties during early 2026. Reports indicate a 26.67% reduction in deaths and a remarkable 81.08% drop in injuries. However, the region continues to grapple with a disproportionate number of motorcycle-related fatalities, which account for a staggering 86.36% of all road deaths. Regional Minister Akamugri Donatus Atanga has expressed strong support for the NRSA's innovations but emphasized that technology must be matched by proactive local measures, particularly in enforcing helmet use and addressing the dangerous rise of unapproved high-intensity headlights. In the Northern Region, drivers and pedestrians are increasingly endangered by these illegal, excessively bright headlights, which impair night visibility and force hazardous maneuvers on roads already plagued by potholes and poor lane markings.
Experts and safety advocates are calling for Ghana to move beyond blaming individual driver error and instead adopt a 'Safe System' approach. This philosophy prioritizes human life over vehicle movement by designing 'forgiving' infrastructure and implementing speed limits aligned with human survivability. As the nation moves toward a 24-hour economy, the NRSA is appointing Regional Ministers and local leaders as Road Safety Ambassadors to foster a culture of collective responsibility. The goal is to integrate better road design, unified agency cooperation, and strict enforcement to ensure that road users—particularly vulnerable motorcyclists and pedestrians—are protected by a system that accounts for human fallibility. The success of these reforms will ultimately depend on the seamless integration of the new Traffic Tech system and the public’s willingness to embrace a more disciplined road culture.
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