TRANSPORTATION Secretary Vince Dizon on Wednesday said the government would push through with a planned “shame campaign” targeting motorists who blatantly violate traffic rules, underscoring the state’s duty to ensure road safety.
Dizon said the initiative aims to discipline hardheaded drivers whose reckless actions endanger the public despite repeated enforcement efforts.
“The government is simply asking everyone to follow the rules and regulations on the road. Let’s not be hardheaded,” Dizon said.
The shame campaign would be reserved for “grave violators” whose actions put lives at risk, and not minor infractions.
The Department of Transportation (DOTr) has tasked its legal team to study the measure’s boundaries before the nationwide rollout.
The proposed initiative includes a weekly “Huwag Tularan” (Do Not Emulate) list, naming motorists caught repeatedly endangering themselves and others on the road.
Dizon said the move is meant to send a strong signal that reckless drivers “should not be emulated.”
This campaign comes amid an unprecedented enforcement drive by the Land Transportation Office (LTO).
In the past six months alone, the agency issued 2,008 show-cause orders and revoked 420 driver’s licenses — a record-high number in its history, according to LTO Assistant Secretary Vigor Mendoza II.
Earlier “name-and-shame” efforts by local governments and traffic units, which published photos or CCTV videos of violators, drew mixed reactions from motorists’ groups, citing concerns over due process and privacy., This news data comes from:http://www.yamato-syokunin.com
Dizon said the DOTr is mindful of these issues, which is why the program is under legal review.
Philippines to launch shame campaign vs traffic violators

“We need to teach a lesson to those who are really hardheaded on the road,” he said.
Philippines to launch shame campaign vs traffic violators
Road safety advocates have long called for stricter enforcement amid rising incidents of reckless driving, drunk driving, and road rage.
Government data show that traffic-related accidents remain one of the leading causes of injury and death in the country, particularly in highly urbanized areas.
- Globe: Mobile data helps drive national progress
- Floods kill over 30 in Indian-controlled Kashmir, displace 150,000 in east Pakistan
- Marcos willing to submit to a lifestyle check
- PH Construction Board asked to address 'accreditation for sale' scandal
- Kneecap to play Paris concert in defiance of objections
- DICT grants amnesty to unregistered delivery firms
- Indonesia protests put spotlight on paramilitary police force
- Australia expels Iran ambassador over antisemitic attacks
- US halts 80% complete, huge offshore wind farm
- LPA has big chance of intensifying into tropical cyclone to be named ‘Kiko’