Young male drivers have been the biggest obstacle to reducing annual deaths caused in road accidents in Australia.
Statistics suggest that young male drivers have been the biggest obstacle to reducing annual deaths caused in road accidents in Australia, despite years of public safety campaigns costing millions of dollars.
Even mandatory seat belt legislation, random breath-testing, and the proliferation of red-light and speed cameras have failed to dissuade young men from fishtailing their way across columns of traffic.Most of these men are between 18 to 25 years of age, according to official data.
Barely 10 per cent of the young men are said to be having driving license. The data also reveal that they have accounted for nearly 22 per cent of driver fatalities so far in this year, a figure that has remained a constant throughout the decade.
By comparison, women aged 50 to 59 represent just two per cent of the carnage.
Last year, 63 people died in road accidents over the Christmas-new year period across Australia.
David Healy, the Transport Accident Commission's general manager of road safety, says that the bad driving record of some young adult men is perhaps associated with some anti-social behaviour. He adds that recklessness on the road possibly "a manifestation of a broader risk-taking lifestyle".
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In the 18-months since police have got the authority to impound cars of drivers who use their vehicles for stunts or excessive speed, over 3300 cars have been confiscated.
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Source-ANI
SRM /J