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The route is repeatedly only patched while extensive maintenance work is needed, says the FF Plus. (Photo: Screengrab)

A fatal accident on Friday on a patched road between Orania and Hopetown between manganese mines and export ports is yet another wake-up call to prioritize thorough repairs to the route.

According to dr. Wynand Boshoff, provincial leader of the FF Plus in the Northern Cape, this road has been damaged by thousands of ore trucks for years, which makes it very dangerous for ordinary motorists.

According to media reports, a 16-year-old boy died when a school transport minibus was involved in a head-on collision. The driver of the minibus was apparently arrested for overloading the minibus.

“The route has already been under Sanral’s control since 2022, but is repeatedly only patched up while extensive maintenance work is needed – from the road’s foundation to the surface.”

Boshoff says regular road users are used to only driving on the side of the road where empty ore trucks usually travel. Vehicles only swerve to the right side of the road when oncoming traffic.

“The FF Plus supports increased law enforcement regarding overloading, but the road condition significantly increases the risk on this route.”

Boshoff says the collision highlights several questionable policy decisions: The neglect of the rail transportation system that forces freight to roads; the neglect of the maintenance of roads and centralization of education which means farm schools close and learners are transported to schools daily on dangerous roads.

“The road was earmarked for a new surface during 2025. However, this was postponed so that sufficient funds can be budgeted in the next financial year to rebuild the road from the foundation. In the meantime, the road remains dangerous. In 2025, a video in which two trucks collide head-on with each other is widely distributed on social media.”

Part of: SA news
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