Traffic offenders to pay N100, 000 fine, says FRSC

FRSC Corps Marshal Boboye Oyeyemi
Oyeyemi

Dr. Boboye Oyeyemi, Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) says plans are underway to compel traffic offenders to pay one hundred thousand naira as a penalty for a traffic offense.

Oyeyemi said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the sideline of the Technical Working Group (TWG) on Nigeria Road Safety Strategy on Wednesday in Abuja.

“You cannot arrest somebody for using a phone while driving and he pays four thousand naira as a penalty. And almost immediately he goes back to commit the same offense.

“Fines are supposed to serve as a deterrent, which is why I said that I am in support of what the National Assembly is doing presently amending the Act of the FRSC to make the fines go up.

“I was not the one that initiated it, it is the National Assembly that initiated it and I am in support and I will make sure that before the middle of next year this is passed into law.

“I believe that by the time traffic offenders’ start paying between fifty to one hundred thousand naira for a single traffic offense, they will not want to commit such offense again,” said.

The FRSC boss reiterated that penalties for traffic offenses were to serve as deterrent adding that the present regime of fines and penalties do not serve as a deterrent, hence the need to increase the fines.

“Look at Lagos, the minimum fine is fifty thousand naira and people are complying. I am not a revenue-generating agency but again we must ensure that those fines serve as deterrent for people not to do it again

“When an offender pays fifty thousand or one hundred thousand naira fine, he or she will think twice before committing the offense again.

“What is the essence of a person disobeying traffic light and pays four thousand naira only. In fact, some of them insult us saying ‘ is it not four thousand?’.

“They will go to our office and use the POS to pay and walk away and you will see them entering their cars and using the phone again,” he said.

Oyeyemi explained that aside fines, the FRSC also take traffic offenders to health facilities and the court of law.

He stressed that court usually gives its own penalty, “but the court is always liberal a bit; we appreciate them.”

He said also that the corps was proposing community services as a punishment for traffic offenders.

“This punishment is also in the amendment now; when you are convicted, in your suit and tie you will go for community services.

“People think that the fines are high but they seem not to understand what we have been stressing; fines are to serve as a deterrent.

“If you don’t want to pay the fine, then don’t commit the offense,” Oyeyemi said.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fB-nXHtFAk]