Wednesday January 28, 2026

Police intensively monitor zebra crossing rules on Tuesday

Published : 23 Aug 2021, 22:47

Updated : 23 Aug 2021, 22:52

  DF Report
DF File Photo.

The Police will conduct extensive monitoring of adherence to pedestrian crossing rules across the country on Tuesday, said the National Police Board in a press release on Monday.

The control is mainly targeted at drivers of vehicles and their traffic behaviour near pedestrian crossings.

During the special control day, the Police collaborate with the municipal parking control authorities and will also intervene with stopping and parking that causes inconvenience and danger to the movement of vulnerable road users.

“The objective is to improve the overall safety at crossing,” said Chief Superintendent of the National Police Board Heikki Kallio.

According to Kallio, the control will focus mainly on cases where the driver of the vehicle fails to provide free passage to a pedestrian already crossing the road or preparing to step to the crossing.

The operation will also pay attention to cases where a vehicle or a tram standing before a crossing is passed without stopping.

Moreover, the controls will focus on situations where the visibility to a crossing is otherwise limited but the vehicle does not slow down or stop before the crossing, if necessary.

On the control campaign day last year, the police issued sanctions to drivers of motorised vehicles for failing to give unhindered passage to pedestrians. The number was 85. In addition, car drivers got 44 traffic penalty fees and fines for other violations of the pedestrian crossing rules.

Cyclists and drivers of light electric vehicles also got 57 cautions and six traffic penalty fees for failures to observe the pedestrian crossing rules. Seven pedestrians failing to respect the red light were imposed the traffic penalty fee while 16 pedestrians got a caution.

Kallio said that the pedestrian crossing is marked with the appropriate road sign, or it is an element of the road, cycle path or tram tracks, intended for crossing and shown with road markings. Based on the new Road Traffic Act which entered into force in 2020, vehicles such as the bicycle, can also and is allowed to cross the road along the crossing but without causing danger or inconvenience to pedestrians. Drivers of vehicles must remember that they must always give way to other road users when entering the carriageway after the crossing of a pavement or cycle path.

Based on the statistics published by Liikenneturva (Finnish Road Safety Council), as many as one in ten of those who died and seven percent of those injured in traffic were pedestrians.

During the past three years, the average number of annual traffic deaths was 21 (11 in January-June this year) while the number of injured pedestrians was 360 (100 in January-June this year).

One in five of the victims died on a pedestrian crossing which was the venue of 60 percent of pedestrian injuries.

“Two age groups are highlighted in accident statistics: the young and the aged. Among the pedestrians who died on a crossing, four of five were 65 or older, while their share was almost one in three of those injured. Over one fourth of the pedestrians injured in road traffic were under 25. In fact, the drivers of vehicles must be particularly alert when they approach crossings and see children, young and aged persons,” Kallio added.