SADC roads branded deadly regional traps

Regional leaders across Southern Africa have called for unified traffic safety standards after two fatal bus accidents killed nearly 90 people on the same highway stretch within one year. A cross-border coach carrying 82 passengers plunged off a cliff near Makhado in South Africa, killing 44 people from Zimbabwe and Malawi. The March 2024 crash at a nearby location claimed 45 lives when a Botswana pilgrim bus caught fire.

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa urged member states to harmonize regulations governing vehicles, drivers and road conditions across borders. South Africa loses over 142 billion rand annually to traffic crashes while Zimbabwe records 406 million dollars in yearly losses from road injuries. Botswana reported 72 fatalities in early 2025, an 18 percent increase from the previous year.

The Southern African Development Community has begun implementing uniform road signage to reduce driver confusion at international crossings. Analysts estimate that traffic deaths cost low-income nations up to three percent of their economic output each year. Regional authorities identified vehicle overloading, inconsistent enforcement and inadequate infrastructure as primary factors in the mounting death toll.
 

Attachments

  • SADC roads branded deadly regional traps.webp
    SADC roads branded deadly regional traps.webp
    75.4 KB · Views: 51

Trending content

Sponsored

Top