Saturday 26 October 2013
Sierra Leone Drivers' Test To Include Playing Board Game?
Sierra Leone has
launched a new policy aimed at curbing road accidents that kill hundreds
every year - a board game that anyone seeking a driving license must
buy and play before being allowed on the roads. Competitors move
models of classic cars around the board after rolling traffic
light-themed dice. Their cars must negotiate obstacles like "vehicle
tests" that result in fines if a windscreen is broken or insurance is
out of date. Players must also answer questions on road laws. "It will help a lot," said Morie Lenghor, Assistant Inspector General of
the police and the game's creator. "Most crashes here are a result of
ignorance of the highway code. And most drivers don't even understand
half the road signs. "I
realized that a lot of people don't like reading much, but what if I can
put the highway code in a game that is attractive to young people?" The
Drivers' Way is manufactured in India and costs 60,000 Leones, about
US$14. Three thousand copies have already been imported. "It's
played a bit like Scrabble," said Sarah Bendu, Executive Director of
Sierra Leone's Road Transport Authority and an avid player of the game. "They
(novice drivers) will have to pay for it. Then they will play it for
two or three months, or maybe just one if they're smart enough, then
they will come for their test." There are plans for an online version
which will be marketed throughout West Africa. Balogun Koroma, Sierra Leone's transport minister, said the game was a "light-hearted way for people to learn road signs". Driving
in Sierra Leone is often reckless, vehicles poorly maintained and roads
severely degraded in many areas. The country has no working traffic
lights. More than 380 people were killed in 2,204 registered road accidents in Sierra Leone last year. Many
drivers say they never had to take a test. "If you have the money it's
easy," said an official in the car-hire industry. "Most people here do
not take tests". (reuters)
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