Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 29 January 2026
📘 Source: TimesLIVE

On August 25 2011, Jacob Humphreys ignored signals at a level crossing in Blackheath in Cape Town and found himself on the tracks of an oncoming train. Ten children were ushered into eternity on their way to Good Hope Primary, an Adventist Christian school. The driver survived the crash.

He would admit previously slipping through the booms and having had two accidents with children in the taxi. On January 19 2026, Ayanda Dludla overtook several cars on a narrow Vanderbijlpark road and sped headlong into an oncoming truck. Fourteen children would touch the face of God that week, several of them attending El-Shaddai Christian School.

The government spin doctors responded quickly: his professional driving permit had expired, the problem was private transport etc. Between 2018-2022, about 800 precious souls died in scholar transport-related incidents, reported one newspaper. Three questions might help us make sense of these tragedies.

📖 Continue Reading
This is a preview of the full article. To read the complete story, click the button below.

Read Full Article on TimesLIVE

AllZimNews aggregates content from various trusted sources to keep you informed.

[paywall]

Why has nothing been done to end these mass killings of children? One reason is that South Africans have become versed in reactive politics. Something tragic happens, politicians rush to the scene of the crime to express concern.

At the Vaal tragedy, the president makes a sad announcement saying, “we are pained” and remarks appreciatively that the minister visited the devastated families. “We inherited a system,” he continues (don’t roll your eyes), that we must work together to solve this problem, “and look at how we can save the lives of our children.” We react and then we do nothing for as sure as the sun comes up tomorrow, there will be more children dying in or flung out of taxis. It is not as if there is no policy, for we have the National Learner Transport Policy (2015) and regulations such as 247 and 250 of the National Road Traffic Act.

But policy is not practice and that is why the mayhem will continue. Merely listing the problems make things worse since we have heard them after every tragedy: reckless driving, unroadworthy taxis, overcrowded minibuses, competition among taxi owners, corruption within the industry, weak regulation, little oversight, driver competence, poorly maintained vehicles and on and on. Quite simply because it is mainly the children of the working classes and the poor.

They are fodder to the elites, black and white, who drop their children in luxury 4x4s close to their homes. Trust me, if it was a plane load of middle class and wealthy people going down on a regular basis, you would have seen widespread panic and an urgency of response. It is quite simple, actually: change human behaviour through relentless enforcement of the regulations that already exist.

That however will require two things — significant, sustained funding and uncompromising political will. Both are in short supply in South Africa since scholar transport for the poor is simply not a priority for this government; it is as simple as that. What is the fundamental difficulty behind enforcing compliance? To take the compliance fight to the taxi industry is to provoke a highly organised industry whose gargantuan economic success (an estimated R100bn in annual revenue) depends on a semi-broken system.

[/paywall]

📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by TimesLIVE • January 29, 2026

Powered by
AllZimNews

By Hope