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School shootings are horrific – but so are vehicle accidents

Statistics in the USA indicate that death as a result of gunshot wounds is the leading cause of death among the youth, overtaking car crashes as a leading cause.

The CEO of MasterDrive, Eugene Herbert, examined this statistic.

“While the loss of these young lives in such a way is an unspeakable tragedy, South Africa is facing its own crisis when it comes to loss of life among the youth. A major difference is that it is not necessarily as visible as the crisis in the USA.

“Car crashes remain a leading cause of death for youth in South Africa. In 2020 it was estimated that 672 children between the ages of zero and nine died on South African roads. This means that every 10 days in South Africa, 19 children die on our roads. The gravity of this loss, however, is not fully grasped because it does not receive the same attention and media coverage that it would if all 19 children died on the same day in a crash.”

It also means that every 10 days in South Africa, we lose the equivalent number of children that the USA lost in a mass shooting.

“As the USA again questions how to change this tragic state of affairs, it is also time for South Africa to question how to change our own tragic reality. Children in the USA are trained on what to do should a shooter enter their school, yet, are South African children being educated about safely using the roads, whether as passengers or pedestrians. For many children, the answer is no.

“The first step in protecting vulnerable road users is to teach these children some of the most basic road safety rules. On a previous occasion in which the company worked closely with children, MasterDrive noted that the majority of children did not know how to use a seatbelt properly. Additionally, many of these children were transported to school in their parents’ vehicles. Such a situation is an indictment on all road users and the role they should be playing in protecting their passengers, particularly vulnerable ones.”

If the loss of children in a mass shooting is believed to be preventable, political agendas aside, should the loss of children in car crashes also be viewed in the same light?

“MasterDrive believes this is definitely so and more attention needs to be paid to protecting these young lives. We wish to share our condolences with every parent that lost a child whether that be in the shooting incident or in a South African car crash,” concluded Herbert.

Source: MotorPress

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Matthys Ferreira

Served in SAPS for 22 years - specialised in forensic and crime scene investigation and forensic photography. A stint in photographic sales and management followed. Been the motoring editor at Lowveld Media since 2007. "A petrol head I am not but I am good at what I do".

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