TAMALE, the Northern
Regional capital, could easily earn the reputation as the motor city of Ghana
as the streets of this sprawling northern city is dominated by motorcycles of
various kinds.
Unfortunately,
wearing of helmets is the exception rather than the norm.
Each
day, hundreds of motor riders take to the streets of Tamale meandering their
way through chains of vehicles without crush helmets. Among these recalcitrant
riders, we have children, youth and adults, many of whom are females.
It
is difficult to decipher why a sane person, fully conscious of how crucial, but
fragile, the human head is, would pick a motorbike, zoom off like thunderbolt,
without a crush helmet for protection.
It
is even more difficult to appreciate why women, who are perceived as more
conscious of safety, would be riding motorcycles, although admiringly, without
any protective gear.
After sampling views from a number of young and adult female riders in Tamale, it came out that the challenge for many of them was how to use a crush helmet without messing up their hairstyles.
“You
know women put on various hairstyles to make them look beautiful, but the use of
helmets mostly destroy the styling of the hair,” said Joyce Kande, a teacher.
She
explained that apart from weave-on and low pony, other hairstyles, particularly
those raised high, make it difficulty for women to use helmets.
For
Hajia Fati, a business woman, using a helmet, does not only destroy the styling
of her hair, but also poses other inconveniences.
“When
you use a helmet, you feel so much heat and this makes it uncomfortable,” she
intimated.
“You
are forced to carry the helmet with you everywhere you go and this also creates
discomfort. Imagine going into a banking hall holding your handbag in one hand
and your helmet in another hand,” Hajia Fati further stated.
It
was revealed also that many young ladies like to show off when riding their motorbikes
and so do not want to use a helmet, since that would make them unrecognisable.
“When
they are riding their bikes, they want people to recognize them and so they
prefer not to wear helmets,” Muniratu Issah, a tertiary student, remarked.
According
to her, many of her colleagues fancy riding motorbikes whilst waving at people
they know – “they just want everybody to know that they too have ‘mapouka’
bikes.”
‘Mapouka’
is the name given to a type of medium-sized motorcycle that has caught on with
women in Tamale, partly because it comes in various beautiful brands, that
include Luojia, Super Access, Hoajin, Beautiful, Sukida, Motor King, TVS and
Savvy.
Shockingly,
the apathy towards helmets has become so ingrained in many riders in Tamale so
much so that even when they are forced to use helmets by the police, they only
obey as long as the police are within sight.
Do
not be amazed therefore to see a motor rider on the move with a bare head,
whiles a helmet hangs on the side of the motor.
“Sometimes
the police or the Zoom police would be standing on the road arresting people
without helmets and so you have no option than to carry a helmet with you so that
when you are approaching them, you can wear it,” a female rider said, with a
guilty smile.
One
is left pondering over whether women in Tamale place more value on their
convenience than their lives.
Road
safety experts generally agree that wearing a helmet is one of the most
important things a motorcycle rider can do for protection as it protects the
rider by preventing brain and spinal cord injuries in times of crush.
According
to the National Road Safety Commission (NRSC), each year, a number of people
die from motorbike accidents as a result of injury to their heads.
“Last
year, we had 70 reported cases of accidents involving motorbikes in the region.
The figure is probably higher than that because many of such cases are not
reported,” the Northern Regional Manager of the NRSC, Mr Alexander Ayatah mentioned
to the Daily Graphic.
He
explained that many of those who lost their lives through such accidents could
have survived if they were wearing helmets.
He
described the situation where women ride without helmets as regrettable, noting
that females were more cautious on the road than their male counterparts, “but
that is not enough to protect them if they ride without helmets.”
The
country’s motor traffic laws make it criminal for any person to ride without
helmet, irrespective of the person’s sex.
“When
we go on the streets to arrest people who ride without helmets, we do not care
whether you are male or female, because the law is no respecter of sex or
gender,” the Commander of the Motor Transport and Traffic Unit (MTTU) in the
Northern Region, Supt. Cashman Blewushie said in an interview.
He
admitted, however, that the police were facing a daunting challenge in dealing
with the helmet problem because the number of people engaged in the practice
was overwhelming.
He
also mentioned that anytime the police tried to prosecute offenders, people in
big places would interfere in the process and this encourages impunity and
indiscipline.
“One
thing I know for sure is that they can continue to run as far as they can from
the police, but they can certainly not run away from death if they continue to
ride without helmets,” Supt. Blewushie said.
How
long would female riders in Tamale continue to avoid helmets in the name of
comfort?
8 comments:
Motorcycling is not for men alone and I want every female to be aware of that. However the women in the pictures above are really brave to be riding without a helmet.
Surely, Tamale women are among the bravest people in Ghana.
Nice now women can do like men in every department of life.
www.cobija.biz
Hi Saleh. Did u mean it when u said every department. Many men would debate u on that. Ha, ha ...Cheers!
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