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You could be the next victim of road rage, and so could I

You could be the next victim of road rage, and so could I

Author: By Kasia Yoko
Date: 2026-04-30

ROAD SAFETY | OPINION

South Africa's roads have become a stage for a terrifying kind of violence. The danger isn't only the stranger in the balaclava. Sometimes, it's the driver right next to you at the traffic light.

We've all seen it now. The Emmarentia video. A moment of fury captured on camera

that became impossible to look away from — not because of the violence alone,

but because of the children. Small, helpless witnesses to a grown adult making

the worst possible decision of their life. That image doesn't leave you easily.

And then came Kwadukuza. Another flare-up, another vehicle used as a weapon of frustration and rage. Fortunately, this time, only a Golf GTI paid the price. But we know it could have been far, far worse.

These are not isolated incidents. They are symptoms of something deeply embedded in our daily lives, a simmering, barely contained anger that too many South Africans carry behind the wheel every single day.

We've been conditioned to think of violent crime as something that happens in dark alleys, carried out by strangers with sinister intentions. But the data tells a different story. Over one thousand murders were directly linked to road rage, arguments, and provocation. Not hijackings. Not robberies. Arguments.

Think about that for a moment. The person most likely to kill you in South

Africa is not a career criminal. It could be someone you know. Someone who attends the same school pickup as you. Someone you'll see at a braai next weekend. Someone whose name you don't know but whose car you've overtaken on the N3 a hundred times.

"More people are murdered in arguments and misunderstandings in South Africa than in any category of 'regular' crime. The killer isn't always a stranger. Sometimes, they're the driver in the lane next to you."

Research published in the International Journal of Social Science Research and Review confirms what many of us feel instinctively: road rage in South Africa does not exist in isolation. It is directly linked to the broader culture of violence in our society. The frustration, the poverty, the inequality, the daily grind of broken infrastructure and impossible commutes — it all accumulates. And when someone cuts you off at a robot, it can be the thing that tips a person over the edge.

South Africa's roads are among the most dangerous in the world, and not just because of potholes or reckless taxis. They are dangerous because of the emotional temperature we bring to them. Load shedding, unemployment anxiety, cost-of-living stress, inequality visible at every turn — we carry all of this into our cars. We are tightly wound, and the road is where the spring finally releases.

The Automobile Association has described South Africa's driving culture as a "culture of aggression" and that was over a decade ago. It has not improved.

If anything, the post-pandemic years have made people more impatient, more isolated, more combustible.

An exploratory study based in Durban, right here in KwaZulu-Natal, found that road rage, aggressive driving, and hazardous behaviour are of increasing concern. Our province is not exempt. The Kwadukuza incident is proof of that.

- Tailgating persistently, even when the lane is clear ahead

- Flashing lights aggressively or using the hooter as a weapon

- Deliberate blocking or cutting off another vehicle

- Exiting the vehicle to confront another driver

- Making threatening gestures or verbal threats

- Using the vehicle to intimidate revving, inching forward

The Cost Of "Winning" An Argument On The Road

Here is the brutal truth: no argument on the road is worth winning. Not one. The person who feels they were wronged, who gets out of the car, who leans into the window, who throws the first punch — they don't know who's on the other side. They don't know what that person is carrying. They don't know what's in the glove compartment. They don't know if today is the day that person has finally run out of restraint.

The children in that Emmarentia video will carry what they saw. The driver who snapped will carry what they did. There are no winners in road rage. There are only casualties, some physical, some emotional, some permanent.

"You have a choice. Resolution over violence. Always."

If someone wrongs you on the road, wave it off. Laugh it off. Let them go. Take a breath. Think of whoever is waiting for you at home. Drive away. No incident on the road is worth an unthinkable tragedy.