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120 killed on Donegal roads in five years 10.02.09

DONEGAL is one of the worst counties in Ireland for road deaths with 120 people killed here in a five-year period, new statistics show.
The figures, supplied for the first time by the Road Safety Authority, show there were 23 people killed on Donegal roads in 2003; 29 in 2004; 27 in 2005, 19 in 2006 and 22 in 2007. Road deaths in Inishowen feature prominently in the figures following a spate of tragic multiple-fatality crashes that shocked the entire country.
The league table also shows that 348 people sufferred serious injury due to road accidents in Donegal in the five-year period.
The analysis of road accidents from 2003-2007 also shows that drivers in rural counties such as Donegal are more likely to be killed in crashes. This is despite the bigger populations in the larger towns and cities. Longford is the most dangerous county in Ireland for road deaths with Cavan, Monaghan and Westmeath also faring badly.
A culture of 'boy-racing' particularly in border counties including Donegal is also a contributory factor to the high accident rate, according to the RSA study. The organisation also highlighted the 'externalised' reaction to accidents by Irish people who often blame 'bad roads' or 'bad bends' but are slower to blame bad driver behaviour.
Donegal Road Safety officer Eamonn Brown said there was a perception that young people "grow out of" fast driving as they get older. But he warned that some young people don't get the chance to change their ways.
Mr Brown also welcomed the reduction in the number of serious road accidents in the Donegal in the last two to three years.
Meanwhile, the RSA figures show that nationally, 1,808 people died on Irish roads from 2003 to 2007. Meanwhile, the organisation called for a national trauma database to be set up to keep an exact record of road deaths and injuries in Ireland.
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