There are many factors which contribute to the large death toll on our roads. Firstly, a road traffic accident can happen when the driver's attention is continuously distracted. When a driver is impaired by tiredness, illness, alcohol or other drugs (both legal and illegal), the likelihood of one of these contributing to a road accident is high. An accident is likely to happen when the road conditions are not favourable. Speeds also exceed safe conditions, such as the speed for which the road was designed, and the speed of surrounding motorists can also precipitate a road accident.
Drinking and driving is a big cause of death on our roads. More media advertising should be put in place to ensure people are aware of the dangers of drinking and driving. Also, harsher penalties should be put in place for people who are found to be drunk whilst driving. Therefore, more roadblocks should be put on our roads to ensure that drivers will not drive if they have consumed too much alcohol.
Taking all this into consideration, measures should be put into place to ensure the numbers of people dying on our roads significantly decreases. The traffic departments across the country have a big role to play. Heads of these departments should ensure that each traffic officer are proactive and enforce all road laws, not only speeding. These laws include ill-discipline, disregard of signage and road markings and negligent and reckless driving. They should contribute to the safe and expeditious flow of traffic, thus ensuring fewer accidents on the road.
The average South African road user is not only to blame. The whole system is to blame, poor policing