Skip to main content

Tispol announces support for new European cross border enforcement legislation

The European Traffic Police Network, Tispol, has come out in support of new European legislation, effective from 7 November 2013, requiring EU member states to exchange information on drivers who commit traffic offences in other countries. Tispol believes this information exchange will ensure that foreign offenders can be identified and punished across borders. It further improves the consistent enforcement of road safety rules throughout the EU by ensuring equal treatment of offenders. The legislation c
November 8, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The European Traffic Police Network, 650 TISPOL, has come out in support of new European legislation, effective from 7 November 2013, requiring EU member states to exchange information on drivers who commit traffic offences in other countries. TISPOL believes this information exchange will ensure that foreign offenders can be identified and punished across borders. It further improves the consistent enforcement of road safety rules throughout the EU by ensuring equal treatment of offenders.

The legislation covers the four "big killers" that cause 75 per cent of road fatalities: speeding, not stopping at red traffic lights, non-use of seatbelts and drink driving.

EU figures suggest that foreign drivers account for five per cent of traffic but around fifteen per cent of speeding offences. Most have gone unpunished so far, with countries unable to pursue drivers when they return home.

TISPOL president Koen Ricour said: “We agree with the 1690 European Commission that these new rules will have a powerful deterrent effect and change the behaviour of many motorists who may previously have assumed they were beyond the reach of the law while driving in other countries.”

“Estimates show that nearly 500 lives a year could be saved under a system where all drivers have to comply with traffic legislation, regardless of what country they are travelling in.

“We fully support the new legislation, as it removes the opportunity to drive away from justice. Cross border enforcement of traffic offences will prove a vital tool for police officers across Europe and will help make a big contribution to the European Commission's aim of halving road deaths by 2020.

“We believe the new rules will help raise the profile of road safety across Europe and will prove an effective deterrent to those people who previously assumed they could drive according to their own wishes, rather than according to the appropriate rules, when away from their home country.

“In summary, the Directive will make Europe not only a safer place, but also a fairer and more equal place where the same standards of justice apply to all.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nine in 10 people want tougher sentences for drivers who kill
    July 11, 2016
    A study to mark the launch of Brake’s new Roads to Justice Campaign shows there is huge support for strengthening both the charges and sentences faced by criminal drivers. Ninety-one per cent of people questioned agreed that if someone causes a fatal crash when they get behind the wheel after drinking or taking drugs, they should be charged with manslaughter. That carries a possible life sentence. At present people can either be charged with causing death by dangerous driving or causing death by careless
  • TISPOL responds to slowdown in EU road safety progress
    March 25, 2015
    Road deaths fell by a negligible one per cent in the EU last year according to new data released by the European Commission. The drastic slowdown in progress puts at risk the region's target of halving road deaths by 2020. TISPOL general secretary Ruth Purdie called for an immediate end to the reductions in numbers of traffic police. “It is unlikely that anyone will establish a precise provable link between the decline in traffic police numbers and the increase in casualties across Europe. But as long as ro
  • Over 900,000 European drivers tested for alcohol in summer safety operation
    August 22, 2012
    A series of controls to enforce drink driving and drug driving regulations across Europe saw police conduct more than 900,000 breath tests in a seven-day period, of which nearly 18,000 were positive. Motorists were also checked for drugs in the operation, organised by the European Traffic Police Network (TISPOL), between 4 and 10 June. In total, 928,863 drivers were controlled. There were 17,970 alcohol offences and 2,773 drug offences detected.
  • Driven to distraction? Call Acusensus
    November 3, 2022
    Trial to detect mobile phone and seatbelt offences results in 216 prosecution notices