New data shows a fall in road deaths in both Lithuania and Sweden. The official data reveals that 24 people were killed on Swedish roads in December 2013, according to preliminary figures from the Swedish Transport Agency (Transportstyrelsen). This compares with 26 killed in December 2012. Overall during 2013, 264 people were killed in road traffic crashes in Sweden, while 2,691 were seriously injured. This is the lowest number of fatalities on Swedish roads since 1944. Meanwhile 258 people were killed in r
New data shows a fall in road deaths in both Lithuania and Sweden. The official data reveals that 24 people were killed on Swedish roads in December 2013, according to preliminary figures from the Swedish Transport Agency (Transportstyrelsen). This compares with 26 killed in December 2012. Overall during 2013, 264 people were killed in road traffic crashes in Sweden, while 2,691 were seriously injured. This is the lowest number of fatalities on Swedish roads since 1944. Meanwhile 258 people were killed in road traffic crashes in Lithuania in 2013, down from 302 in 2012. The data was provided by Lithuania's Traffic Police and shows the lowest number of road deaths since Lithuania regained its independence in 1990. Traffic Police chief Gintaras Aliksandravicius commented that the biggest problem now is with the relatively high number of pedestrians killed in traffic. Pedestrian fatalities totalled 98 in 2013, some 38% of all road deaths.