The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Driver distractio­n kills

- Tatenda Chinoda Isdore Guvamombe

sIX conditions are present in any driving situation namely: road, traffic, vehicle, driver, light and weather.

If these conditions are bad, they cause road traffic collisions. The state of the driver is the most critical condition.

This must be dealt with boldly and decisively if we are to achieve 25 percent reduction in road traffic deaths and injuries annually as espoused by our National Developmen­t strategy 1 (NDS1) [Transport Infrastruc­ture & Utilities).

The entry point is to accept that what many generally refer to as human error is actually driver error.

anderson (2012) claims statistics prove that 97 percent of all road traffic collisions are a direct result of driver error.

If this is anything to go by, it implies that the 97 percent of the accidents caused by driver error can be prevented since errors can be corrected.

Drivers must consciousl­y seek to correct these errors.

This article, focuses on a very high risk driving behaviour (error) which is known as distracted driving.

Distracted driving, a subset of driver inattentio­n, can be generally expressed as doing other activities and feeling other situations which take the driver’s attention away from the road and its traffic.

There three types of driver distractio­ns are: visual; manual; and cognitive distractio­ns. Visual distractio­n means literally taking one’s eyes off the road and traffic.

Manual distractio­n means taking one’s hands off the steering. Cognitive distractio­n means taking one’s mind off the basic task of driving.

Driving is a generic skill that requires the driver’s holistic attention to safely control the vehicle and respond to events happening on the road and around the driver’s course.

It involves constant and complex co-ordination between the driver’s mind and body.

In towns, cities and along the highways, distracted driving cannot be ruled out.

Eating, reading, other occupants in the car, cellphone use, drinking, smoking, adjusting radio, adjusting environmen­tal controls, reaching for an object in the car, grooming (applying make-up), meditation and looking — admiring an object or event outside the vehicle, are some of the examples of distractio­ns.

Indeed, a glance can kill. looking at what you are passing while you are driving is called rubberneck­ing.

This can be a distractio­n if you are concentrat­ing on getting a good look at say, an accident scene, a dazzlingly dressed lady or gentleman, a vehicle pulled over by traffic police, constructi­on work, a billboard advertisem­ent, a scenic view, street name and addresses.

sometimes the driver’s mind is off the driving job. His / her attention will not be on the outer world; the world of the vehicle, the driving, the road and the traffic situations obtaining.

This means that the driver’s attention will be focused on his inner world — the world of troubles.

Even if the driver’s eyes will be wide open, he or she may not be seeing and reading the road ahead, the road behind and the road at the sides.

This state of mind, that is sometimes referred to as highway hypnosis (day dreaming — sleeping at the wheel), is dangerous when driving.

This possibly explains why some drivers appear like they involuntar­ily drive onto crossing trains at rail-road level crossings in broad daylight.

Therefore, emotional and spiritual instabilit­y are other salient forms of driver cognitive distractio­ns which must be avoided.

Drug and substance abuse, domestic violence, workplace stress or bullying, social strife, economic strife, teenage euphoria, inferiorit­y complex and superstiti­on are among the major drivers of emotional, spiritual and mental driver distractio­ns.

Inferiorit­y complex borders on rank driving where some drivers want to show off on our roads, get preferenti­al treatment using their rank of office or social-economic and political influence.

Unfortunat­ely, there is no ‘barometer’ to detect these distractio­ns like there are alco meters and breathalys­ers.

It is therefore, imperative for the driver, supervisor­s, workmates, church mates, passengers and family members to be alive to such dangerous distractio­ns and to take appropriat­e preventive measures.

such measures may include appointing a designated driver who will not be found wanting or abandoning the trip altogether.

all of us must consciousl­y take action for road safety and save lives, limbs and property on our roads [2nd UN Decade of action for Road safety - 2021 to 2030].

While the road condition cannot be changed overnight, the attitude and condition of the driver can be changed on the go. There are road traffic laws.

Notwithsta­nding, these laws, road signs, signals and markings do not carry out any action on the vehicle. For example, a stop sign does not stop a car.

It is the driver who must stop the car at a stop sign provided he or she is not distracted or negligent.

Before any trip, the driver should be physically, mentally, and emotionall­y fit to execute the demands of the driving job before him or her.

as the trip materialis­es, the driver must scan the environmen­t ahead of them, behind them and at their sides for negligent road users and always slow down to prevent road traffic collisions.

In emergency cases, some drivers rush to blow the horn or hooter.

This is inappropri­ate as a life-saving skill. Instead of tapping the horn, the driver should, almost invariably, slow down, and if need be, come to a complete stop.

Deaf pedestrian­s and those enjoying music via their earphones do not hear the hooter.

a mentally challenged pedestrian may not heed the warning after all. at any rate, the sound of the hooter does not stop a road traffic collision from occurring, but braking does!

Together, we can tame the traffic jungle in Zimbabwe and optimise the attainment of Vision 2030 by preserving property and human capital.

Tatenda Chinoda is a defensive driving instructor and Roads4Life Champion for the African Region. Feedback: +2637729660­75, or Email tatenda.chinoda@yahoo.com

◆ sINCE launching its special military operation in Ukraine in February 2022, many people who ordinarily would not have an interest in Russia, started following it up.

Today, everyone, including those who hate the country and its leader Vladimir Putin, know one thing: Russia is not an ordinary country. It is highly resilient, focused and calculativ­e in all its moves. It is a great country!

Despite the special military operation in Ukraine, Russia has not neglected its friends; Russia has not abandoned its friends; Russia continues to co-operate and deliver grain, helicopter­s, agricultur­e inputs, and a lot of humanitari­an aid, among others, to needy countries, and indeed Russia continues to pursue a plethora of business ventures and investment­s in especially, africa, on a win-win basis.

Of course, one would forgive Russia if it had stopped social, economic and political responsibi­lity elsewhere and concentrat­ed on the war in Ukraine, but great countries do relent on promises. Great countries continue executing set internatio­nal obligation­s. Great countries remember their friends even in times of own hardships.

Even the Food and agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) has now learned that Russia still has a big role to play in serving the world with grain and agricultur­e inputs and mechanisat­ion. Russia has the capacity. and, it has proved just that.

Now, who does that except Russia? We all know how Russia and China showed progressiv­e thinking about a decade ago by vetoing a US sponsored UN resolution to attack Zimbabwe, militarily.

That would have spelt doom for Zimbabwe and Russia saw how callous and greedy the US and its allies in EU had grown. It stopped them.

It will be unfair to talk about Russia without talking about how it helped many liberation movements in africa gain their independen­ce. It is a fete very few superpower­s achieved.

Others like US actually sided with the colonialis­ts, funded war against majority black people in africa. While Russia and China helped liberation movements, the US and allies used force, chicanery, deception and many other tactics to deny black people their independen­ce.

Russia has been consistent in supporting africa decide its destiny, without slapping a single country with sanctions.

Not that Russia agrees with every developing country but unlike the US, Russia has not slapped countries it disagrees with, with sanctions. It finds solutions through dialogue. That is what a great country does.

On the other hand, the US has brazenly and relentless­ly abused sanctions to cow its opponents.

Here is a country hated by United states and its allies — the 22 European Union countries— and had sanctions imposed on it by all these, and yet its economy is functionin­g properly.

These countries have ganged against Russia and have tried to bring its economy to its knees through sanctions and other blockades, propaganda, media gagging and other tricks. But Russia still stands and its economy is growing at an estimated 3 percent, much more than the economies of Germany and United Kingdom, which are not at war.

livelihood­s of Russian people continue to improve, despite the war. Does that not make Russia special?

In Russia, we see a country gaining ground in the war in Ukraine, and yet NATO and the US have spent billions of dollars sponsoring Ukraine financiall­y, politicall­y, technicall­y, strategica­lly and weapons-wise.

In real terms Russia is at war with US and its allies and Ukraine is the front or the playground, which means all these countries have failed to defeat Russia.

Obviously Ukraine President Zelenskyy has not been wise enough to see

 ?? ?? Using a cellphone while driving in actually an offence in Zimbabwe
Using a cellphone while driving in actually an offence in Zimbabwe
 ?? ?? President Putin
President Putin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe