PDA

View Full Version : Blind driver says he is perfectly safe for the road.



Sniper
8th September 2006, 12:31
Feck, in NZ the bastard would have got off in case we upset his human rights. Stupid prick.



I'm perfectly safe on the roads, says blind driver

By Nick Britten

Sept 5, 2006

A police officer described yesterday how he pulled over a motorist who was veering across the road and found that he had no eyes.

Omed Aziz, who lost both his eyes in a bomb blast and is also deaf, was caught behind the wheel with a friend sitting in the passenger seat giving him instructions on when to steer and brake, and how quickly to drive.


Bomb victim Omed Aziz, who also suffers from leg tremors, claimed he was perfectly safe and denied a charge of dangerous driving before being convicted.

Pc Glyn Austin told magistrates that he saw Aziz's white Peugeot 405 move from one side of the ring road in Oldbury, West Midlands, to the other, crossing a white hazard line, before turning left.

He and a colleague had already seen him successfully negotiate two roundabouts and a corner.

Pc Austin said that when he pulled over the car, Aziz, who wore dark glasses, was fumbling with the controls. When asked if he noticed anything about Aziz he replied: "I did — he didn't have any eyes."

He said: "I attempted to speak to the driver. At that point the passenger leaned across and said 'He's blind'."

Aziz, 31, and his passenger, who was banned from driving at the time, were arrested and taken to Smethwick police station, where Aziz confirmed that he was totally blind and had impaired hearing in his left ear as a result of injuries from an explosion in Iraq before he moved to Britain.

He said he had driving experience prior to being blinded and said he was suffering from depression about his injuries and was "testing himself" by getting behind the wheel.

Warley magistrates heard that he also lost a thumb and two fingers in the blast.

Pc Austin's colleague, Pc Stuart Edge, told the court that he asked Aziz whether he could see him. He said: "He removed the dark-coloured sunglasses he was wearing and I could clearly see he was blind as he had no eyes."

Timothy Gascoyne, defending, said Aziz, who did not give evidence, should be cleared because "the question is not whether his driving was dangerous, but whether being blind makes it dangerous".

He said: "If my client hadn't been blind he wouldn't have been arrested for dangerous driving, so it doesn't fall far below what is expected from a careful and competent driver."

Peter Love, prosecuting, told the court: "A blind man controlling a vehicle is inherently dangerous. A careful and competent driver would not dream of driving in this manner."

Aziz, from Darlaston, Staffs, who was followed by police driving at 35mph for half a mile before he was stopped at 11pm in April, was led into court by an interpreter. He previously admitted driving with no tax, insurance or MOT.

Finding Aziz guilty, Richard Knight, the chairman of the bench, said: "We find he was aware of the real risk of driving with his injuries and therefore this amounts to dangerous driving." He will be sentenced at Wolverhampton Crown Court next week.

Swoop
8th September 2006, 12:43
He would get a licence easily here.....:yes:

Beemer
8th September 2006, 13:34
He would get a licence easily here.....:yes:

I don't think so, Swoop. I reckon he's more likely to be taken on as a driving instructor...

The Pastor
8th September 2006, 14:29
The eyesight test when you get your learners would stop him getting a licence in new zealand.

Lou Girardin
8th September 2006, 19:47
He probably drives better than we do.

Bussaman
8th September 2006, 19:52
Maybe he was like that blind guy on 20/20 last night and used human sonar by clicking his tongue.

myvice
8th September 2006, 23:07
He probably drives better than we do.
Not exactly a challenge...

scracha
9th September 2006, 07:30
The eyesight test when you get your learners would stop him getting a licence in new zealand.

The eyesight test wasn't a kiwi invention you know. I presume he got his license before the bomb blast.

unhingedlizard
9th September 2006, 08:57
If he was deaf how could his mate have been giving him instructions?

The Pastor
9th September 2006, 11:19
The eyesight test wasn't a kiwi invention you know. I presume he got his license before the bomb blast.


Yes but if he came to nz he would have to resit an eyesight test.

Sniper
9th September 2006, 11:20
Yes but if he came to nz he would have to resit an eyesight test.

Unless he went to the dairy and bought one

The Pastor
9th September 2006, 11:24
Unless he went to the dairy and bought one

I'll have a pack of dunhills 25's and a nz drivers licence mate.

myvice
9th September 2006, 21:00
If he was deaf how could his mate have been giving him instructions?

Good spotting!
Maybe he pointed?

oldrider
9th September 2006, 21:35
Apparently Omed Aziz's whole family lost their eyesight in exactly the same manner before becoming refugees in New Zealand!
They are "all" now living in Dunedin and driving cars too, just like "him".
I know this because I experienced their driving, over and over again yesterday, as I drove through Dunedin, en route to visit Ruralman at his Southern hideaway Lodge in South Otago!
I believe I was lucky to get through Dunedin unscathed! :shit: Not a good look Dunedin! :slap: John.