No Room for Shortcuts – Police and Railways Joint Action Plan Must Prevent Future Tragedies
Police and railways officials outlined comprehensive short, medium, and long-term safety measures following a deadly Bangkok train-bus collision that killed eight people, including improved warning systems, traffic coordination, and enforce
Following the tragic Bangkok train-bus collision that killed 8 people, there are concerns that authorities will only apply temporary solutions rather than address root causes. However, Police Commander General Siam Bunsorn recently convened a multi-agency meeting to develop short, medium, and long-term preventive measures. Representatives from the Transport Ministry, State Railway of Thailand, Bangkok Mass Transit Authority, Department of Land Transport, Department of Rail Transport, Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, and local police precincts attended. Bangkok has 58 railway crossing points spanning 28 police station areas. The meeting discussed installing warning systems, automatic barriers, and deploying traffic officers at crossings. Enforcement of traffic laws against violators was also addressed, with potential legal amendments needed for effectiveness. Authorities identified 19 high-risk crossing points, classified by threat level (red, yellow, green), requiring immediate physical remediation. Train schedules must be coordinated with police to manage road traffic flow and prevent vehicles from stalling on tracks. A new communication channel between police and railways will be established for urgent situations. Medium and long-term solutions will include technology installation to improve operational efficiency. A key finding was that coordination between police and railways has been inadequate and poorly integrated. When train schedules are known, police must clear traffic from crossing areas as a priority to prevent congestion. The tragedy that claimed 8 lives and destroyed numerous vehicles represents losses that should never happen again. Serious preventive measures must be implemented—not just temporary responses. The fact that Police Commander General Siam is actively convening these meetings offers hope that such disasters may be prevented going forward.