I propose to ban informing drivers about radar checks and other actions by police officers. In Germany and Switzerland, for example, you will not hear or read a notice that there will be a radar check here and there at such and such an hour. Last week, police officers carried out a campaign to prevent people from talking on the phone while driving and publicised the campaign through the media. The result of such notifications is that drivers rely on the media announcements and, because they know when and where a radar check or police action will take place, they drive as they should at the time and place of the radar check or action, but when they get out of the place or when the time is up, they start breaking the road rules again. I believe that this kind of information has a detrimental effect on road safety, precisely because drivers are informed when and where the radar checks will take place, and so they adjust their driving only at the place and time of the radar checks, and in all other situations they ignore the rules. I propose that it should be made law that police officers must carry out unannounced checks on compliance with road traffic rules at completely random times and in completely random places all over Slovenia (in all areas - including, for example, whether drivers stop at pedestrian crossings when pedestrians are waiting - because Slovenia is very bad at this...). In driving school we were taught that stopping at a pedestrian crossing is compulsory, but practice shows the opposite - very few people stop at a pedestrian crossing, as if it were not only voluntary, but even altruistic). The result of such random, unannounced checks will be fewer deaths on our roads, because drivers will finally start to be afraid of committing offences. I would also suggest that, in order to avoid making it look as if the police are just filling the state coffers, fines for offences should be reduced and the number of penalty points for offences should be increased.