Cape Argus

Driver arrested for being five times over alcohol limit

- Kieran Legg STAFF REPORTER kieran.legg@inl.co.za

A MAN caught driving five times over the legal alcohol limit was among 19 people arrested for drunk driving at the weekend.

The Brackenfel­l motorist’s breath alcohol level tested at 1.34mg/1 000ml; the legal limit is 0.24mg/1 000ml. This was the highest recorded number by traffic officers who set up roadblocks across the province over the weekend to try to nab drunk drivers.

The arrests came just a week after carnage on the province’s roads, with 43 people dying in several crashes over two weekends this month.

This weekend brought the weekend death toll to 58, making it the bloodiest month so far this year.

Last week the Western Cape Minister for Transport and Public Works Donald Grant said alcohol played a role in the large number of road fatalities.

The city’s mayco member for safety and security, JP Smith, said there was a blatant disregard for drunk driving rules, with too many drivers still taking chances.

This has led to advocacy groups, such as South Africans Against Drunk Driving, supporting plans by the National Department to introduce a new “zero limit” in order to cut back on the number of deaths linked to drunk driving.

The organisati­on’s founder, Cato Smit, said it was backing the new policy for a variety of reasons, namely that alcohol abuse was behind about 65 percent of around 20 000 road deaths every year.

“The Department of Transport is not going to achieve the ‘Decade of Action’ pledge we took to reduce the death rate by 50 percent before 2020 unless we take drastic measures.”

The “Decade of Action” was proclaimed by the United Nations General Assembly in 2010 and called on 90 countries to lower the number of deaths and injuries on roads.

National Transport Minister Dipuo Peters said crashes cost the country about R40 billion every year.

Meanwhile, Western Cape Traffic chief Kenny Africa said 608 vehicles were screened for speeding, of which 29 offences were recorded.

The fastest speed was recorded on the N1, where traffic officers caught a motorist travelling at 145km/h in a 120km/h zone.

There were crashes across the province in which 15 people were killed in 14 incidents. More than half the people killed were pedestrian­s.

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