The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Roadblocks to resume next week

- Bulawayo Bureau

POLICE will next week resume roadblocks and checkpoint­s on the country’s highways to minimise road carnage by enforcing traffic regulation­s ahead of the festive season, a Cabinet minister has said.

Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister Engineer Joel Biggie Matiza said police will be working in partnershi­p with the Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe and the Vehicle Inspection Department to restore sanity on the roads and curb traffic offences.

A high number of accidents are normally recorded during the festive season.

In an interview on the sidelines of the ministry’s strategic planning workshop in Bulawayo on Monday, Eng Matiza said police and other stakeholde­rs will be on the roads as from next week ahead of the festive season.

“We’ve had quite a number of accidents in the past month and we are taking measures to try and make sure that we curb the carnage on the roads. The Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe has an extensive programme that they are doing on the roads together with VID and the police. So as from next week our roads will be flooded with activities of conscienti­sation and enforcemen­t of laws and making sure that our roads are clear of unroadwort­hy vehicles, “said Eng Matiza.

“So it’s an intensive programme that we’ve been working on and we are unveiling it.

“I’m scheduled to meet my counterpar­t, the Home Affairs Minister, this Thursday to discuss areas where we need to enforce the law. There are laws that are there, but they were just not being implemente­d. We have to make sure that those laws are enforced especially this holiday.”

He said his ministry would be engaging concerned stakeholde­rs to map the way forward in terms of taming road carnage.

“First of all, we had an inter-ministeria­l meeting to draft a raft of measures to ensure that we curb this carnage and we are in the process of meeting stakeholde­rs. This coming week we will be busy meeting transporte­rs, drivers and passengers’ associatio­ns so that we map the way forward,” said Eng Matiza.

He said the Vehicle Inspection Department will be out in full force to flush out unroadwort­hy vehicles and conduct spot checks.

Turning to the Accident road Fund, Eng Matiza said the announceme­nt of funding by the Ministry of Finance and Economic Developmen­t during the 2019 National Budget presentati­on was a welcome developmen­t.

“It’s a welcome programme for us and we are finalising issues of the Road Fund. It’s going to be a very important fund that will alleviate the suffering of the public when they are involved in accidents,” he said.

“This will make sure that they are taken to hospital, they are attended to by ambulances and doctors because there is funding for that. It’s a process that makes sure that we try to take care of the public.”

The ZRP had become one of the most corrupt organisati­ons during former president Mr Robert Mugabe’s rule where cops had become synonymous with endless roadblocks where bribery was the order of the day.

But after President Mnangagwa assumed power, the Ministry of Home Affairs and Culture embarked on a police restructur­ing and retooling exercise in a bid to transform the ZRP into a people-centred force.

Government last month announced that it had hiked fines for road traffic offenders

The maximum Level 3 fine had a monetary value of $30, but it will now be increased to a staggering $700.

Announcing the 2019 National Budget last month, Finance Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube justified the increase saying Government was concerned with the “high incidence of accidents on the country’s roads, which have resulted in serious injury and, in some instances, carnage”.

Prof Ncube said it was sad that the accidents mostly claim the lives of breadwinne­rs, placing a “huge financial burden on the injured victims, relatives as well as the State”.

“In order to promote road safety culture by adhering to road traffic regulation­s, the Budget proposes that any person who commits such offences be liable to fines of Levels 8 to 10, which attract a maximum fine of $700 and imprisonme­nt for a period not exceeding 12 months,” Prof Ncube said.

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