The organisation says 320 road accidents between January and June left 360 students dead and 109 injured across the country.
Representational image of accident. Photo: Collected
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Representational image of accident. Photo: Collected
At least 360 students were killed and 109 others injured in 320 road accidents across Bangladesh between January and June this year, according to Bangladesh Jatri Kalyan Samity.
The organisation’s secretary general, Mozammel Hoque Chowdhury, revealed the figures in a statement issued today (11 July), marking the 15th anniversary of the Mirsarai tragedy.
He said in the absence of regular safety awareness programmes involving students, teachers, and guardians to prevent a repeat of the Mirsarai tragedy, the country continues to lose a large number of students to road accidents every year, with many suffering injuries and some left permanently disabled.
Referring to the association’s month-wise data, Mozammel said January saw 57 road accidents that killed 57 students and injured 22 others, while February recorded 39 accidents claiming 47 student lives and leaving 11 injured.
March was the deadliest month with 59 accidents killing 67 students, though only one injury was reported that month. April recorded 51 accidents with 56 students killed and 25 injured, followed by May, which saw the highest monthly accident count at 61, killing 73 students and injuring 23. In June, 53 accidents left 60 students dead and 27 injured.
Mozammel also said the country continues to lose students to road accidents every year due to a lack of effective safety awareness initiatives.
Recalling the Mirsarai tragedy, he said a mini-truck carrying students from several schools plunged into a roadside ditch in Chattogram’s Mirsarai upazila on 11 July 2011, killing 45 people, including students. The incident remains the deadliest single road accident in Bangladesh.
He alleged that no awareness programme on student road safety has been undertaken by the government since then, and that no meaningful awareness has developed among students and guardians either, resulting in continued loss of young lives on the roads every year.
To reduce road accidents involving students, the Jatri Kalyan Samity proposed a five-point recommendation.
These include incorporating road safety awareness content into school textbooks and organising at least one hour-long awareness session every month in common rooms with all students, involving experts on road safety.
The association also called for zebra crossings to be drawn at every road-crossing point on national and regional highways, particularly near educational institutions, along with proper signboards marking school zones.
It further recommended deploying vest-clad “road safety guards” with red flags to stop traffic and help students cross highways safely near schools located along national and regional roads, and urged every educational institution to form a road safety committee comprising both students and teachers.
