Aller au contenu principal

Director-General's remarks at the first-ever World Youth Assembly for Road Safety (en anglais seulement)

Sergei Ordzhonikidze
Speech

23 avril 2007
Director-General's remarks at the first-ever World Youth Assembly for Road Safety (en anglais seulement)

Remarks by Mr. Sergei Ordzhonikidze
United Nations Under-Secretary-General
Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva
World Youth Assembly for Road Safety

Palais des Nations, Assembly Hall
Monday, 23 April 2007, at 10:30 a.m.

Madam Chair
Madam Director-General
Mr. Executive Secretary
Mr. Vice-President of the European Commission
Ladies and Gentlemen:

It is a pleasure to welcome you to the Palais des Nations for this first-ever World Youth Assembly for Road Safety. The Secretary-General has expressed great support for the event and is highly appreciate of this initiative. Regrettably, he was not able to stay in Geneva to address you personally. Instead, he has asked me to deliver his message to you and to extend his best wishes for a successful event. So, allow me to begin by presenting to you the Secretary-General’s message to the meeting:

“This First United Nations Global Road Safety Week -- dedicated to young road users -- is a platform for improving safety for the hundreds of millions of young people who travel the world's roads every day.

Since World Health Day 2004, and subsequent discussions in the United Nations General Assembly, Governments and their partners have paid increased attention to road safety. But there is still much progress to be made. Road traffic collisions kill nearly 1.2 million people worldwide every year, and injure millions more. They are the leading cause of death for people aged 10 to 24 years, with devastating impact on families and communities.

Road traffic deaths and injuries also place an enormous strain on a country’s health care system, and on the national economy in general. In regions where young people constitute a major part of the population, the problem is even more acute. On average, road traffic injuries cost low- and middle-income countries more than one per cent of Gross National Product. For all these reasons, road traffic injuries are an important obstacle to development.


Fortunately, there is a growing recognition that road traffic injuries can be prevented. A number of countries have shown that by taking action on drink-driving, speeding, use of helmets and seatbelts, and increasing the visibility of pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists, a significant number of lives can be saved and resources spared, even as motorization continues to rise. The United Nations Road Safety Collaboration has addressed these issues as priorities.

Because prevention measures require political will and financial investments in efforts targeting young people, decisions to improve road safety need to be made at the highest levels of Government. Beyond government ministries of transport, health and education, many others have a role to play: parents and guardians, educators, community and business leaders, automobile associations, insurers and vehicle manufacturers, celebrities and the media, survivors of road traffic crashes and their families.

Road safety will not happen by accident. Through the World Youth Assembly for Road Safety -- the key global event of the First United Nations Global Road Safety Week -- and hundreds of other events being hosted around the world, the World Health Organization, the United Nations Regional Commissions and their partners are giving a voice to young people. Let us listen to their advice. And let us improve safety on the world’s roads, for their sake and for ours.”

That was the end of the Secretary-General’s message. Let me now add a few words of my own:

The United Nations General Assembly has reaffirmed the need to further strengthen international cooperation on road safety. This Youth Assembly is part of our efforts to do so, drawing on the expertise of the entire United Nations system.
This Assembly is an important way of engaging young people in the global, regional and local efforts to improve road safety. Young road users are not only victims – they are also agents of change. In this way, your Assembly here is an example of how the United Nations reaches out to include and involve those that are affected by our work.

By participating here, you have demonstrated a firm commitment to reinforcing road safety. You are helping build a safer world for us all. I wish you much success in your discussions.

Thank you very much.