Daily Dispatch

Alcohol the root cause

Zero limit for drivers mooted

- By MHLABUNZIM­A MEMELA and TJ STRYDOM

NOT a drop. That’s how much Transport Minister Ben Martins wants you to drink before you get behind the wheel.

“We want [the blood-] alcohol [limit] to be 0% in drivers,” Martins said when announcing the preliminar­y statistics for festive season road deaths.

With the toll at 1 465, Martins warned he was considerin­g a complete ban on drinking and driving.

Experts doubt such a move will help bring down casualties but Martins and his department are adamant.

“Most crashes are the result of drunk driving, speeding, dangerous overtaking, not using seatbelts and unroadwort­hy vehicles,” he said.

His predecesso­r, S’bu Ndebele, mooted lowering the speed limit to 100km/h, from 120km/h, to curb road deaths. Nothing came of this suggestion.

Martins said the carnage on the roads cost the economy about R306billio­n a year. Automobile Associatio­n spokesman Gary Ronald put the cost at around R157-billion.

Ronald said he doubted a lower blood-alcohol limit would change drivers’ behaviour.

“The problem is not the limit is too high. It is people do not feel the consequenc­es,” he said.

Forensic scientist David Klatzow agrees and believes the government will not be able to enforce a new limit adequately because forensic laboratori­es are a “sorry mess” and lack the skills needed to generate evidence that would put offenders behind bars.

The present limit for drivers of private vehicles is 0.05g of alcohol per 100ml of blood, and for commercial drivers 0.02g.

Department of Transport spokesman Tiyani Rikhotso confirmed a total ban on the drinking of alcohol by motorists was one of the proposed amendments to the National Road Traffic Act due to be introduced this year.

“Most of our plans are in the pipeline and we hope to introduce everything this year,” he said.

The department had received overwhelmi­ng support from the public for the proposed ban, he said.

According to Rikhotso, more than four of five crashes could be attributed to human error and “alcohol is the common denominato­r in most fatal crashes on our roads.”

Of the 3 944 motorists arrested during the festive season, 2 856 were found to have been drinking and driving.

Martins said this season’s roadsafety campaign had been a success but there had still been carnage on the roads despite all the efforts of the government, the private sector and civil society to enforce the rules of the road and raise road-safety awareness.

As many as 17 000 traffic officers had been deployed on the roads between December 1 and January 8, he said.

The preliminar­y estimate of road accident deaths is slightly below the 1475 in the correspond­ing period of 2011-2012.

About 40% of the people killed this year were pedestrian­s, most of whom were walking on the roads while drunk.

“The deaths on our roads result in serious social and economic costs. The economic ramificati­ons include an increase in social developmen­t and health [spending],” Martins said.

As well as advocating the lowering of the blood-alcohol limit, he supports a total ban on alcohol advertisin­g, saying it has a huge influence on road deaths. Such a ban was first mooted by the Department of Health and Social Developmen­t.

Free Market Foundation executive director Leon Louw thinks a ban on advertisin­g is a particular­ly bad idea.

“It is an example of feel-good regulation and there is no evidence that will make any difference.”

Louw warned it would result in consumers having less informatio­n about products .

A ban on alcohol advertisin­g, said Louw, would hit industries such as the media, the arts and sports hard because they relied on advertisin­g and sponsorshi­p revenue.

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