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The presence of Blue Light Brigades appears to be increasing with these high-speed motorcades now an almost daily occurrence on Gauteng highways. The Automobile Association (AA) says Blue Light Brigades pose a threat to road users, particularly as drivers in the vehicles transporting politicians and behave aggressively towards other motorists.

“The vicious assault on three drivers on the N1 highway in Fourways, Johannesburg in 2023 is a good example of how ‘protection officers’ in the motorcades respond to others. The message from these official personnel is that their passengers are more important than other road users, and that the public must simply yield or face personal attack,” notes the AA.

The AA says it has raised concerns for many years about the Blue Light Brigades but that little seems to be done to curb their outrageous behaviour. Repeated calls for proper oversight of the VIP unit’s operations have clearly fallen on deaf ears. The unit’s members continue to act with impunity, often considering other road users a menace instead of, rightfully, citizens they need to protect and serve.

“We receive many complaints from our Members and the public about how these motorcades force them off the road and barge their way through heavy traffic – especially during peak traffic hours in the morning and afternoon. There is ongoing anecdotal evidence that occupants of motorcades violently gesticulate and show their firearms at other motorists to intimidate them, and that they are generally belligerent on the road. South African road users deserve so much better than this,” notes the AA.

The AA again asks of the role of the principals being escorted in the Blue Light Brigades.

“Whatever politician is being transported in these motorcades must make it clear that they expect the highest levels of professional and ethical behaviour from their support staff. Allowing these officers to act the way they do sends a message to the public that they are above the law, which they are not,” the AA notes.

Section 58(3) of the National Road Traffic Act (NRTA) permits drivers of emergency vehicles such as traffic officers and duly authorised drivers, as well as a “person appointed in terms of the South African Police Service Act who drives a vehicle in the carrying out of his or her duties” to disregard the directions of a road traffic sign displayed in the prescribed manner. Regulation 176 of the NRTA further states that drivers on the road are supposed to give an absolute right of way to a vehicle sounding a device or bell of displaying an identification lamp.

“However, we contend that any driver who drives recklessly or is careless about the safety of other users on the road should be held liable for gross negligence where they pose a threat to property or another person whether they are driving a politician, delegate, VIP, or a car fitted with a blue light, just like any other road user. In fact, driving recklessly so a principal can be on time for a meeting does not constitute an emergency for the rest of the motoring public and it is shameful to think or act otherwise,” the AA concludes.

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