
The State Traffic Safety Inspectorate of the Russian Federation and the State Traffic Inspectorate of Belarus will exchange information about violators, including those caught on traffic cameras. Motorists from Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transnistria may be the next to be fined.
As Kommersant reports, the Duma has ratified an agreement between Russia and Belarus on the mutual recognition of fines for violations of traffic rules. Although domestic cameras were able to recognize the license plates of cars registered in the republic, there was no one to issue orders until now – our traffic police did not have access to data about the owners.
If an offender is arrested by a traffic police inspector after a report has been drawn up, he will now be given two months to pay the fine. If he does not pay on time, the traffic police will send a request to the Belarusian traffic police to execute the order with the help of bailiffs. If a violation is captured on camera, the traffic police will send a request to the traffic police for the details of the car owner. If the fine has not been paid after 60 days, a request for enforcement will follow.
A similar scheme will apply to Russians who have violated traffic rules on the territory of Belarus, but taking into account local laws. They give one month to pay the fine, not two. Vice President of the National Automobile Union Anton Shaparin recalled that cars with license plates from Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transnistria also violate traffic rules, but no one has punished them yet.
As Kommersant reports, the Duma has ratified an agreement between Russia and Belarus on the mutual recognition of fines for violations of traffic rules. Although domestic cameras were able to recognize the license plates of cars registered in the republic, there was no one to issue orders until now – our traffic police did not have access to data about the owners.
If an offender is arrested by a traffic police inspector after a report has been drawn up, he will now be given two months to pay the fine. If he does not pay on time, the traffic police will send a request to the Belarusian traffic police to execute the order with the help of bailiffs. If a violation is captured on camera, the traffic police will send a request to the traffic police for the details of the car owner. If the fine has not been paid after 60 days, a request for enforcement will follow.
A similar scheme will apply to Russians who have violated traffic rules on the territory of Belarus, but taking into account local laws. They give one month to pay the fine, not two. Vice President of the National Automobile Union Anton Shaparin recalled that cars with license plates from Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transnistria also violate traffic rules, but no one has punished them yet.
Source: Avto Vzglyad
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