The Herald (Zimbabwe)

900 perish in road crashes

- Tedious Manyepo Herald Reporter

AT least 930 people have been killed in 22 259 road traffic accidents recorded across the country between January and July this year.

The figure represents an increase in the number of road deaths as 806 were killed in the correspond­ing period last year in 22 591 incidents reported.

About 4 222 people were injured during the period under review.

Speaking on the sidelines of a media workshop organised by the Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe in Harare yesterday, the managing director Mr Obio Chinyere said it was dishearten­ing to note that of all the crashes recorded up to July, about 94 percent of them were a result of human error.

“It is very dishearten­ing to continue losing lives on the roads due to human error. An average of 5 people die in road traffic accidents every day and of these, 94 percent are a result of human error.

“I would like to urge drivers to be always on the lookout and be alert at all times. We are in a Decade of Action for Road Safety which seeks to reduce deaths by 50 percent by the year 2020.

“Play your part and take defensive driving course as together we can reduce road carnage,” he said.

Mr Chinyere said it was time drivers took full responsibi­lity of their actions on the road if the country was to fully eradicate road carnage.

It is widely believed that bad state of the country’s roads is contributi­ng to the ever-increasing accidents, but statistics have actually proven otherwise.

“Some will always rush to blame the road, but statistics have actually proven that the worst crashes recorded across the country this year, occurred on the newly rehabilita­ted Harare-Bulawayo Highway,” said Mr Chinyere.

He urged motorists to avoid driving defective vehicles.

Several efforts to get a comment from the police were fruitless yesterday.

Chief Superinten­dent Paul Nyathi referred all questions to police chief spokespers­on Senior Assistant Commission­er Charity Charamba.

She did not answer her mobile phone, neither did she respond to questions sent to her by the time of going to print.

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