Nation and World

Friday September 3, 2010
Zebra-painted horses walk Moscow intersections
The Associated Press
A policeman watches a horse painted as a zebra at a crossing at a highway in downtown Moscow. Traffic policemen on Friday were teaching children to cross the road safely with the use of horses and ponies painted as zebras. The poster reads : Attention! Children go to school.
Advertiser

MOSCOW -- A peculiar sight greeted drivers in Moscow on Friday: zebras walking back and forth across some of the city's busiest intersections.

It was part of a police campaign to call attention to the importance of crosswalks, known as zebra crossings, which are routinely ignored in the Russian capital, contributing to the horrific number of pedestrians who are mowed down by cars.

The drivers who slowed down, and there were some, might have noticed that the zebras were actually light gray horses painted with black stripes. On their backs they carried yellow signs reading: "Careful, children are on their way to school.''

Drivers are aggressive and impatient in fast-paced Moscow, where it's not unusual to see cars zipping down sidewalks or blowing through red lights. Crosswalks often exist only in theory, with drivers explaining that it is too risky to stop because the car behind them is unlikely to extend the courtesy.

In the first six months of this year, 378 people were killed and more than 6,600 injured on pedestrian crossings in Russia, according to police. In Moscow alone, 43 people were killed, including two children.

Anyone who has sat behind the wheel in Moscow knows that pedestrians are a big part of the problem, often darting across multi-laned avenues or stepping off curbs without bothering to look left or right.

Many of the worst offenders are children, said Galina Pravdyuk, a police officer who runs educational programs in Moscow schools. She spoke Friday to a class of schoolchildren who visited an intersection being patrolled by a big striped horse called Vorobei, or Sparrow.

Pravdyuk told the children they were never safe crossing the street, even when the green walk light was on. A car's brakes can fail and there was even a case when a car went through a red light because the driver had died of heart failure, she said.

"Children, you have to take care of yourselves while our driving culture is on such a low level,'' she told them.

Russian newspapers are full of gruesome accounts of pedestrians killed on crosswalks. Just this week, two teenage sisters were hit in Moscow, with one killed and the other crippled. Last month, a motorcyclist hit a toddler in a stroller, killing the child.

Comments

Advertiser