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Thailand’s Police Ready for Launch of New E-License and Points System

Not only will motorists be allowed to show their e-driving licenses on their smartphones when they are pulled over, but they will also see points deducted from their scores for bad driving behavior.

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BANGKOK – Thailand’s Police have announced that enforcement of the 2019 Road Traffic Act starts to be enforced on Sept 20th. Irresponsible or careless drivers can expect their licenses to be suspended for three months.

Police are preparing to use a license penalty point system to deal with rogue motorists and careless drivers.

The system will work in tandem with so-called “e-policing.” An initiative to keep drivers’ information on electronic platforms and enable police to keep tabs on and act against wrongdoers. Especially those who don’t pay their traffic ticket fines.

These are the elements of the 2019 Road Traffic Act in a nutshell, according to Police Education Bureau chief Ekkarak Limsangkat.

Police nationwide will be trained on the ins and outs of the new law before Sept 20th. Officers will be forced to abandon seizing driving licenses from traffic offenders, Pol Maj Gen Ekkarak said.

It will be among the first things police do before gradually rolling out more e-policing measures.

“We’ll then enter the full electronic or digital mode as quickly as possible,” Pol Maj Gen Ekkarak said. He is a member of the committee to amend the old Road Traffic Act.

Driver License Points System and Traffic Fines

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Motorists be allowed to show their e-driving licenses on their smartphones when they are pulled over. They will also see points deducted from their scores for bad driving behavior.

The new punishment is stipulated in Section 161 of the Road Traffic Act.

If the drivers lose all of their points, authorities will suspend their driving licenses for three months. If they re-commit the violations, the suspension periods will be extended, he said.

Officers are currently working on a list of traffic offenses subject to the point reductions. Public hearings will be held to allow people to share their views and add offenses. Particularly those related to severe accidents.

Police will be given 90 days to issue organic laws; including laws on the criteria for proper driving behavior; which must be put in place by Dec 19, according to Pol Maj Gen Ekkarak.

He said the points-deduction approach is needed as only imposing fines on wrongdoers has failed to correct their driving behavior.

“Many people still disobey the law, which causes the number of accidents to increase,” Pol Maj Gen Ekkarak said.

He believes that instead of fines, the system of issuing point deductions, a concept that was taken from Japan, will be more effective in making people comply with the laws.

The system, he says, instils the fear of poor marks in drivers, because a lower driving behavior score could lead to a license suspension.

This system, he says, will lead to a lower number of traffic accidents.

Thailand road accidents

If the approach of issuing fines cannot effectively reduce the number of badly-behaved drivers, a psychological tactic directed at their worry, or fear over low points and a subsequent bad result should be applied to add teeth to the law.
Streamlined fine payments

Even the fine payments can be made more intimidating in the event that the wrongdoers neglect to pay their traffic tickets.

Section 141 (1) of the Road Traffic Act says drivers must pay the fines or see their annual car license renewals suspended.

From Oct 1, those who have not paid their fines will only receive “temporary licenses” when they try to go through the renewal process at their local land transport offices, and will be given a deadline of 30 days to clear their fines.

If the motorists do not want to have to worry about maintaining their driving licenses, they will have to pay their fines.

The punishment of delaying license renewals is simple to carry out, as violators’ information collected by police is linked with the large database of automobile owners that is kept at the Department of Land Transport.

Previously, the measure had hardly been in practice because the data held by the two agencies was not completely synchronized.

The license renewal delay is specifically aimed at dealing with the high number of fine defaulters, whose violations were mostly caught by surveillance cameras.

85% of Motorists Ignore the Ticket Fine Payments

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More than 85% of motorists ignored the ticket fine payments, according to assistant national police chief Damrongsak Kittipraphat.

Last year, he said, police issued 11 million tickets, which were double the number issued a year earlier, but drivers only paid off 1.3 million of the tickets.

In the first half of this year, officers already issued 7 million tickets, but up to 5.9 million of them still went unpaid, he added.

Under the new regulations, traffic offenders can pay the money directly to their local land transport offices while renewing their driving licenses and, in the future, “they can even pay it electronically”, said Pol Maj Gen Ekkarak.

However, drivers do not need to fear these punishments if they just respect the laws, he said.
Carrying e-driving licenses

The use of virtual licenses marks the start of the authorities’ efforts to digitize their legal actions.

When more jobs can be done on electronic platforms, it is not necessary for police to seize driving licenses from wrongdoers, as it will burden those who are in many cases required to follow officers to pay fines and get their cards back.

Such a practice will sink into oblivion when people start carrying e- driving licenses.

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The new licenses, to be used on a mobile phone-based application developed by the Department of Land Transport, not only suit a modern lifestyle, but can also serve as a way to remind motorists to pay their traffic fines.

“They can check the number of tickets issued by police,” deputy permanent secretary for transport Peraphon Thawornsupacharoen said.

He said the department will attach quick response (QR) codes to each of the new driving license cards, so owners can scan them and make the e-licences themselves on their smart phones.

Current driving license card holders can also ask for the QR codes at land transport offices countrywide, he added.
Keeping cops in check

Atiluck Kuanhaveth, 28, who has been riding and driving for 10 years, said he agrees with the move against fine defaulters, but suggested the police must also be kept in check.

The image of traffic police has long been tarnished by some dishonest officers, so he is not completely confident that the law will always be enforced in a fair manner.

They may not enforce the law as much on powerful people, and are also prone to abuses of power and committing other types of misconduct, Mr Atiluck said.

“What will happen if these corrupt practices still exist when the digital score deductions are applied?” Mr Atiluck asked.

Source: Bangkok Post

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