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Lesson 5 of the Weather, Highways, Rural Roads, Roadworks and Emergency Situations unit

Goods Vehicle Theory: Emergency Response and Accident Procedures

This lesson provides critical guidance on how to manage accidents and emergencies as a professional goods vehicle driver in Turkey. It covers the legal requirements for securing a scene and the correct procedures for interacting with emergency services to ensure safety and compliance.

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Goods Vehicle Theory: Emergency Response and Accident Procedures

Lesson content overview

Goods Vehicle Theory

Emergency Response and Accident Procedures for Goods Vehicles in Turkey

Operating a heavy commercial vehicle such as a truck, lorry, or road train (categories C1, C, C1E, CE) carries a high level of responsibility. Due to their massive size, weight, and sometimes hazardous cargo, goods vehicles present unique risks when involved in a road traffic accident (trafik kazası) or emergency breakdown. A secondary collision involving a heavy vehicle can be catastrophic.

This lesson provides comprehensive, legally grounded instructions for professional drivers operating under the Turkish Highway Traffic Regulation (Karayolları Trafik Yönetmeliği). It details how to secure an accident scene, contact the unified Turkish emergency services, administer safe first aid, document the event legally, and avoid common post-accident compliance errors.


The Core Protocol: Immediate Steps After an Incident

When an accident or emergency occurs, adrenaline runs high. Professional drivers must rely on a disciplined, systematic sequence of actions. Your primary goal is to protect human life, secure the site to prevent further collisions, and notify emergency services.

Immediate Post-Accident Sequence

  1. Stop and Secure the Vehicle: Bring the vehicle to a complete stop in the safest possible location (e.g., hard shoulder or emergency lane of a highway). Apply the parking brake (emergency brake) and shut off the engine.

  2. Turn on Hazard Warning Lights: Activate your hazard lights (dörtlü ikaz lambaları) immediately to warn surrounding traffic.

  3. Assess immediate dangers: Quickly check for signs of fire, fuel leaks, or hazardous material spills, especially if you are hauling dangerous goods.

  4. Equip Safety Gear: Put on your high-visibility reflective vest (reflektörlü yelek) before stepping out of the cabin.

  5. Secure the Scene: Place your warning triangles at the legally required distances to alert oncoming traffic.

  6. Assess Injuries and Call 112: Evaluate the state of all involved parties and dial the national emergency number.


Accident Scene Securing: Preventing Secondary Collisions

Securing the scene (olay yeri güvenliği) involves taking proactive visual and physical measures to protect victims, emergency responders, and other road users. For heavy vehicles, this is critical because approaching motorists need significant time and distance to stop or change lanes safely.

1. Activating Hazard Warning Lights

Hazard lights must be activated immediately upon stopping. If the vehicle's electrical system is compromised, use portable, self-powered flashing amber warning lights if available. Hazard lights alert traffic in both directions that a hazard is present and that vehicles may be stationary.

2. Correct Placement of the Warning Triangle (Üçgen Reflektör)

Under the Turkish Highway Traffic Regulation, goods vehicles must carry reflective warning triangles. The placement of these devices is strictly regulated based on the type of road and prevailing conditions:

  • Standard Roads (Two-way, single-carriageway): You must place one warning triangle in front of the vehicle and one behind it.
  • Highways and Divided Roads (Otoyol and Bölünmüş Yol): Place the triangle behind the vehicle. Because traffic is one-way, a front triangle is generally not required unless local visibility conditions dictate otherwise.
  • Legal Distances: The warning triangle must be placed at least 30 metres away from the vehicle. Crucially, it must be positioned such that it is visible to approaching drivers from a distance of at least 150 metres.
  • Blind Curves and Hills: If the accident occurs just past a hill crest or sharp bend, place the triangle further back—before the start of the curve or crest—so oncoming drivers receive a warning before their line of sight is blocked.

Warning

Common Mistake: Placing the warning triangle too close to the rear bumper (e.g., 5 to 10 metres) is a major traffic violation. At highway speeds (90 km/h for trucks), a vehicle travels 25 metres per second. A triangle placed 10 metres back gives oncoming drivers less than half a second to react, virtually guaranteeing a secondary collision.


Contacting Turkish Emergency Services (112 Acil)

In Turkey, all emergency services—including ambulance (Ambulans), police (Polis İmdat), gendarmerie (Jandarma), and fire brigade (İtfaiye)—are unified under a single emergency phone number: 112.

Definition

112 Acil Çağrı Merkezi

The unified National Emergency Call Centre in Turkey, coordinating medical, police, fire, and search-and-rescue services through a single telephone interface.

When calling 112, professional drivers must remain calm and deliver precise, structured information. The call taker needs to prioritize resources based on your description.

What to Report to the 112 Dispatcher:

  1. Exact Location: Provide the road name, highway number (e.g., O-4 or D-100), direction of travel (e.g., Ankara direction, km 142), and any nearby landmarks, bridges, or intersection exits.
  2. Nature of the Incident: Describe what happened (e.g., jackknifed semi-trailer, multi-vehicle pileup, rollover).
  3. Hazardous Cargo (ADR) Details: If your vehicle is carrying dangerous goods, immediately report the UN Hazard Class and Panel Numbers. This determines the specialized response gear the fire brigade and environmental teams must bring.
  4. Number and Severity of Injuries: State how many people are injured and whether anyone is trapped inside a vehicle.
  5. Active Dangers: Report any active fires, fuel leaks, downed power lines, or blocked traffic lanes.

First Aid Basics for Commercial Drivers

Professional drivers in Turkey are legally obligated to assist injured persons to the best of their ability and training. However, improper first aid can worsen injuries, leading to severe legal and physical consequences.

Note

The First Rule of First Aid: Do No Harm. Only administer treatment within the scope of your training. If you are not certified, limit your actions to critical life-saving interventions that require minimal medical training, such as heavy bleeding control or securing a clear airway.

Key First Aid Protocols:

  • Do Not Move Victims: Never move an injured person from a vehicle unless there is an immediate, life-threatening danger (such as an active vehicle fire or an imminent risk of the vehicle falling over an embankment). Unnecessary movement can cause permanent paralysis in victims with spinal trauma.
  • Bleeding Control: Apply direct pressure to open, heavily bleeding wounds using clean dressings or cloths from your vehicle's mandatory first aid kit (ilk yardım çantası).
  • Airway Management: Ensure the victim is breathing. If the victim is unconscious but breathing normally, place them in the recovery position (if safe to do so and no spinal injury is suspected) to keep their airway clear.
  • Psychological Support: Keep victims calm, warm, and reassured that professional medical services are on the way. Shock is a dangerous physiological state that can be mitigated by keeping the patient still and warm.

Legal Obligations and Post-Accident Documentation

Following an accident in Turkey, drivers must comply with specific legal procedures. Failing to do so can result in criminal prosecution, heavy administrative fines, and the invalidation of insurance coverage.

1. The Material Damage Accident Report (Maddi Hasarlı Trafik Kaza Tespit Tutanağı)

If the accident has resulted only in property damage (no bodily injuries or fatalities), the involved drivers can mutually complete the Maddi Hasarlı Trafik Kaza Tespit Tutanağı without waiting for the traffic police.

For the mutual report to be legally valid, both parties must agree on how the accident occurred. If there is a dispute, or if any of the following conditions are met, you must not move the vehicles and must call the traffic police (112) to draft the official report:

  • One of the drivers does not hold a valid driver's license or holds a license insufficient for the vehicle category (e.g., driving a CE vehicle with a B license).
  • There is suspicion of alcohol or substance abuse by any driver.
  • One or more of the vehicles belongs to a public institution (e.g., municipality, military).
  • Public property or third-party property (such as traffic lights, barriers, or buildings) is damaged.
  • One of the vehicles does not have compulsory traffic insurance (Zorunlu Mali Sorumluluk Sigortası).
  • The accident resulted in bodily injury or death.

2. Documenting the Scene Manually

To protect yourself against fraudulent claims and ensure smooth insurance processing, gather comprehensive evidence before moving the vehicles (if safety permits):

  • Photographs: Take clear photos of all involved vehicles from multiple angles. Capture the registration plates, the points of impact, tyre skid marks, traffic signs, road markings, and the wider layout of the intersection or road.
  • Witness Information: Collect names, phone numbers, and statements from any bystanders or occupants of other vehicles who witnessed the incident.
  • Dashcam Footage: Secure any recording from your vehicle's dashcam, as this provides objective proof for insurance adjusters and court proceedings.

3. Leaving the Scene (Hit-and-Run)

Leaving the scene of an accident without completing the required procedures is a serious criminal offense under the Turkish Highway Traffic Law.

Warning

Severe Penalties: Fleeing the scene of an accident (olay yerinden kaçmak) results in heavy administrative fines, a high deduction of driver license points, and potential suspension of your professional driving credentials (such as your SRC certificate). If injury or death occurred, fleeing constitutes a major criminal offense that carries severe prison sentences.


Conditional Variations: Environmental and Operational Factors

A professional driver must adapt their emergency response actions based on the immediate environment, weather conditions, and the configuration of their vehicle.

Weather and Visibility Limitations

  • Fog and Heavy Rain: In low-visibility conditions, warning triangles are much harder to see. You must place warning devices further back than the standard 30 metres. If safe, use auxiliary hazard lighting, flare devices, or have a passenger or bystander guide traffic from a safe, off-road position using a flashlight.
  • Icy and Snowy Roads: Approaching heavy vehicles require up to ten times their normal stopping distance on ice. In these conditions, warning triangles must be placed significantly further back to give approaching vehicles sufficient time to brake without losing control.

Vehicle Configuration and Cargo Loads

  • Heavy and Long Vehicles (CE / Road Trains): If your vehicle is exceptionally long or is towing a trailer, it takes up more lane space when disabled. Always ensure that warning triangles are placed to reflect the full footprint of your vehicle combination.
  • Hazardous Cargo (ADR): In emergencies involving dangerous goods, establish a wider safety perimeter. Evacuate bystanders windward (upwind) to avoid inhaling toxic fumes, and never smoke or allow open flames near the scene.

Cause-and-Effect Relationships in Emergencies

Understanding how your immediate choices impact the outcome of an emergency is vital for safe driving.

[Prompt Scene Securing] ──> [Oncoming Drivers Warned] ──> [No Secondary Collisions]
                                                                  │
[Delayed/Poor Securing] ──> [Sudden Braking/Panic]  ──> [High-Speed Rear-End Crashes]
  • Proper Scene Securing \rightarrow Prevents Secondary Accidents: By alerting other drivers early, you give them the reaction time needed to slow down and change lanes safely, neutralizing a potentially deadly pileup.
  • Prompt 112 Call \rightarrow Faster Medical Intervention: Providing precise coordinates and details allows dispatchers to send the correct rescue tools (e.g., heavy extraction equipment or fire suppression units) immediately.
  • Accurate Documentation \rightarrow Legal & Insurance Safeguards: Detailed photos and a properly executed Trafik Kaza Tespit Tutanağı protect your employer and yourself from unjust liability and facilitate quick insurance payouts.


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Frequently asked questions about Emergency Response and Accident Procedures

Find clear answers to common questions learners have about Emergency Response and Accident Procedures. Learn how the lesson is structured, which driving theory objectives it supports, and how it fits into the overall learning path of units and curriculum progression in Turkey. These explanations help you understand key concepts, lesson flow, and exam focused study goals.

What is the first step when involved in an accident as a C class driver?

Your priority is safety. Immediately switch on hazard lights, ensure you are in a safe position, and set up warning triangles at the appropriate distance behind the vehicle to warn oncoming traffic, especially considering the length of your vehicle.

When must I call 112 in a professional driving context?

You must call 112 immediately if there are injuries, fatalities, significant damage blocking a major road, or if you suspect the other driver is under the influence or fleeing the scene. Always provide precise location details.

Should I move my goods vehicle after a minor accident?

If there are no injuries and only minor material damage, and the vehicle is obstructing traffic, it is generally recommended to move it to the side to prevent further accidents after documenting the scene with photos.

What documents are required after an accident in Turkey?

You must exchange information with the other party, including license details, vehicle registration, and insurance information. For professional goods vehicles, also keep your transit documents and cargo manifests ready for inspection.

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