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Road deaths a global epidemic, says report
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Thu 8 Jun 2006

LONDON, June 8 (Reuters) - Road deaths are a global epidemic on the scale of 
malaria and tuberculosis and world leaders must do more to address the 
issue, a report said on Thursday.

The Commission for Global Road Safety, headed by former NATO chief George
Robertson, said 1.2 million people were killed and 50 million injured every
year worldwide in traffic accidents.

More than 85 percent of the casualties were in low and middle income
countries, with road deaths second only to AIDS as a global killer of young
men.

The Commission said the Group of Eight, made up of the world's richest
countries, must back a $300 million, 10-year action plan to address the
issue in developing countries.

Robertson said it needed the same attention from the G8 as was given to the
"Make Poverty History" campaign, which lobbied political leaders to write
off billions of dollars of debt owed by the world's poorest nations.

"In 2005 millions of people, and the leaders of the G8, responded to the
call to Make Poverty History," Robertson said in a statement.

"Yet the gains for development won in 2005 will be at risk if action is not
taken to reverse the growing epidemic of road traffic death and injury, with
its terrible human and economic cost."

The report said that despite causing death on a similar scale to malaria and
TB, road safety was not included in the Millennium Development Goals and so
received far less in overseas funding.

It estimated that the economic cost to low and middle income countries was
$65-100 billion.

Robertson called for "political leadership" from the G8 along with a
significant increase in resources.

The commission's findings will be presented to world leaders before the G8
summit in St Petersburg in July in an effort to have road safety put on the
agenda of future summits.

The report also called for a United Nations Road Safety Summit to be called
to coordinate an international policy for preventing road injuries.

"Five hundred children are dying every say and thousands more are being
disabled or injured," said Formula One driver Michael Schumacher, a member
of the commission set up by the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile
(FIA) Foundation.

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