The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Call to act on road carnage

- Walter Nyamukondi­wa Chinhoyi Bureau

PARLIAMENT­ARIANS have called for the speedy computeris­ation and integratio­n of the country’s transport management system to reduce road carnage attributab­le to human error and unroadwort­hy vehicles.

Coupled with the establishm­ent of stabilisat­ion centres along the country’s major roads for initial care before one is taken to the hospital, computeris­ation will manage the human causative factor in accidents.

Experts say more than 70 percent of deaths in an accident are a result of people failing to get initial attention to stabilise them, especially in the first hour known as the “Golden Hour”.

It has been establishe­d that more than 80 percent of road accidents are a result of human error.

The call by legislator­s comes at a time when 44 people died and 33 others were injured in the Nyamakate bus accident on Wednesday after the driver of a Zambia-bound King Lion bus veered off the road at a curve and crashed into a tree.

About 29 of the 44 bodies, which are all at Chinhoyi Provincial Hospital mortuary, have so far been positively identified.

In an interview, chairman of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Transport and Infrastruc­ture Cde Dexter Nduna said computeris­ation would ensure that police got informatio­n on the suitabilit­y of the driver, his vehicle and other important informatio­n.

“We commend Government for taking the initial step in putting a stabilisat­ion ambulance at Ngundu Halt,” he said. “That process has to be intensifie­d. “We, however, feel that the integratio­n of the road motor transport management system coming up with a database of Zinara, VID and the police will help reduce carnage.”

The database will ensure that informatio­n on the suitabilit­y of a driver, including being above 25 years, with a defensive driver’s licence and vehicle fitness is readily available, especially at roadblocks.

Cde Nduna said provisions in the military that prescribe that four hours of continuous driving should be proceeded by two hours rest were worth of universal enforcemen­t.

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