Two people have died and one remains hospitalised in serious condition after road crashes that occurred in the first 24 hours of the October bank holiday road safety operation.
Shortly after 3pm on Friday, gardaà and emergency services responded to a collision involving a lorry and a pedestrian at the junction of Arran Quay and Church Street.
The pedestrian, a man in his 50s, was pronounced dead at the scene. Gardaà have appealed for witnesses to this collision to come forward.
A man aged in his 20s died in a single-vehicle crash at Drimina, Tubbercurry, Co Sligo, in the early hours of Saturday. The crash took place at about 3.45am on the R294 road and gardaà have again appealed for witnesses.
The force has also appealed for information concerning a serious incident in which a woman in her 20s was injured seriously when her e-scooter crashed at Tom Bellew Avenue in Dundalk, Co Louth. The woman was discovered on the road. The incident is believed to have occurred at about 9.30pm on Friday. She was removed from the scene to Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda.
The incidents happened since the road safety bank holiday programme began at 7am on Friday,
In an update on Saturday afternoon, gardaà said almost 127,176 vehicles had been checked for speeding. The Garda said 283 drivers have been detected and some have been especially dangerous.
Eight people died on the roads over the October bank holiday weekends between 2019 and 2023 and 71 were injured seriously.
The renewed bank holiday appeal comes as fresh data from the Road Safety Association show a sharp increase in fatalities during the peak morning commuting time of 6.00am to 9.00am this year.
By mid-October, there had been 19 deaths between 6.00am and 9.00am, compared with 11 in the same period in 2023 and five in 2022.
Commenting on these detections, Chief Supt Jane Humphries of the Garda National Roads Policing Bureau said: âOur October bank holiday roads policing operation has been under way since first thing Thursday morning and … I am gravely concerned by the risks taken by some drivers and the two fatal road traffic collisions. Please slow down.â