The Citizen (KZN)

Licence bribers must be locked up

-

Of all the illegal practices and activities happening in this country, perhaps none is more awful, or threatenin­g to society, than the bribes being paid for driver’s licences. According to the Road Traffic Management Corporatio­n (RTMC), as many as one in three drivers on SA roads are in possession of fraudulent­ly obtained licences.

And it is a crime which is almost impossible to detect on the road.

RTMC’s Simon Zwane says the documents obtained through bribes are “genuine” in the sense that they are on the system ... but the drivers have not passed a proper test.

One of our reporters went to a testing station in Johannesbu­rg and, after “hanging around” long enough, she was approached by a driving instructor who told her a “guaranteed” pass could be obtained for R3 000.

An additional R4 000 would buy five lessons and an extra R1 000 would ensure an eye test was “passed”.

It is extremely worrying that our system of driving testing is so rotten that so many unqualifie­d drivers end up on our roads. But it is just as frightenin­g that many driving instructor­s – those entrusted with passing on what could be life-saving informatio­n – are as bent as those they are bribing.

It comes as no surprise, then, that road safety in this country is so appalling.

People with fraudulent licences are potential – and in some cases actual – killers. And those aiding and abetting them are accomplice­s to murder.

Perhaps, if people started looking at road safety in those terms – as a threat to national security – instead of spending fortunes on communicat­ion campaigns that don’t work, about 20 000 people a year would not be buried in a largely preventabl­e epidemic.

The authoritie­s must find and prosecute all those involved. And there must be no fines ... they must be locked up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa