 The Coalition of Road Safety NGOs in Nigeria co-sons and the Civil Society on Mental Health and Drug Demand Reduction in conjunction with the Federal Ministry of Transport have expressed worries over the space of road crashes resulting to deaths and injuries in the country. The safety can be prevented with adequate care and support provided for victims when accidents occur. According to statistics by the Federal Road Safety Corps, the World Bank and the World Health Organization, there has been an increase in road crashes in Nigeria for six consecutive years, leading to the death of 41,690 trees annually. This statistics was presented to the media by engineer Prosper Okafo in Abuja, a state inferred that there is an astronomical rise in road crashes despite efforts by the government's intervention, including the FRSC. This statistics was further corroborated by the Nigeria Auto-Journalist Association in its February 2023 edition. As reviewed by Mr Ayobami Umiyale, a retired Assistant Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Corps had a recent retreat by the Commission in Lagos. Quoting from the Federal Road Safety Official Statistics, he said, 5,053 lives were lost in 2016, while 5,121 and 5,181 lives were cut short in 2017 and 2018 respectively. In 2019 and 2020, about 5,483 and 5,574 lives were also lost respectively, while 6,205 lives got perished in 2021 alone. His submission was further elaborated by a mental health expert, Dr James Komalafe, who stated that there is an excess between road accidents and health of drivers generally. There is the urgent need for us to build the scars of road crashes, violations, and several stuff, so we have a compelling roadmap before us to say, hey, let's look at what we can do to abate it, where we cannot do complete eradication, can we mitigate it? And what are the tools, the incentives we have for mitigation? The CSOs halved on the benefit of good and safe roads for the free flow of farm produce and other goods from one point to another. Farmers, after farming, they still end up in the same place. You see food items in a cluster. Imagine someone farming something like tomatoes. After farming it, you don't even know, you remember it's a perishable item, you don't even have a road to take it to where you're supposed to sell it. So the birth of this organization is like a dream come true for farmers on foundation because we believe that one day there will be a train track going around different places that farmers will just come and bring out their food items and sell it. At the end, the coalition called on the Federal Road Safety Corps, as well as Nigerians to support and partner it to stop drugs and substance abuse as a way to reduce and crushes on the nation's roads and highways.