Walking in Panama not always the best way to go
From the Sidelines
Walking in Panama is not necessarily the safest way to go.
If you survive the gaping holes in sidewalks, muggings and people talking on cell phones, there is still the danger of crossing the road.
Official figures released on the weekend show that of the 389 traffic deaths recorded so far this year 163 were “run overs”.
In an environment where motorists rarely stop at zebra crossings, pedestrians jay walk with what they apparently believe is impunity, and diablos rojos engage in chariot races to pick up a fare, the toll is not surprising.
Meanwhile traffic police standing on Calle 50 or Via Espana look the other way. No “coima” from pedestrians?
Behind run overs come 120 deaths from collisions between vehicles and 53 collisions with fixed objects. The latter toll includes two separate events at the same location on the weekend on the Pan-American Highway in Tocumen at the junction of Las Mañanitas and Belén.
A 21year-old died when crashing his car into a utility pole, and less than three hours later at the same junction a 17 year-old was killed when his car struck a crane.
The grim 389 toll of traffic deaths is trailing last year’s total by 19. But with the holiday season approaching, in spite of increased checks on drinking and driving, many more families will enter the new year grieving over the loss of loved ones, and last year’s total is likely to be overtaken.
POLICE RUDENESS
Meanwhile Newsroom is receiving more reports from readers detailing harsh treatment or extreme rudeness from police when stopped at check points.
One resident traveling with her daughter says that when she was why she was pulled over on a city street as she had committed no offence, she was verbally abused, and the officer said “Don’t you know who I am? I am the law around here.” (This rivals the statement of a presidential driver involved in a collision who, although at fault, said to the other driver “Don’t you know who I am?”).
In the case of the police officer no mention of serving and protecting.
The woes of the lady in question got worse. She did not have her cedula in her wallet and her driving license had expired a few days before. Her car was impounded and she and her terrified daughter were hauled off to a police station.
A warning to the wise. Don’t query the police when they stop you … they may not have been trained to emulate the polite London Bobby, or Toronto’s finest, and always carry your cedula or, if a visitor, a photo copy of your passport.
Keeping your license up to date will not only help avoid hassles but will avoid problems with your insurance company if you are involved in an accident.