News

Crash victim says young drivers must slow down

A YOUNG woman who suffered permanent brain damage at the hands of a speeding driver, has joined Mayor Bilal El-Hayek to urge young drivers to slow down ahead of the holidays, so that parents don’t have to wake up to the same news that hers did.

She said her parents will never forget the knock on the front door by police to tell them she had been critically injured in a car accident.
It was shortly after midnight on New Year’s Day 2018, when Tahlia Mardini and her best friend, Tegan, decided to accept a lift from a person they barely knew.
According to police, the male driver was speeding and driving erratically, before losing control and crashing his car.
Tahlia was pulled unconscious from the mangled wreck and rushed to hospital with head and internal injuries and in a critical condition but sadly, Tegan died at the scene.
Almost six years on, the 22-year-old has joined Mayor Bilal El- Hayek to urge young drivers to slow down in the holidays, so that other parents don’t have to go through the same thing.
“I’m working alongside police, the council, youth groups and schools to warn young people that if you don’t feel comfortable with someone in the car, you have the right to speak up,” Ms Mardini said.
“I had the right to say something and I should have. That could have been the stop to something that ended so differently.”
Ms Mardini still suffers from short-term memory loss, but she counts herself lucky to be alive and is committed to sharing her story as we come up to the holiday season.
“It’s a happy season, not a time to be an idiot and drive recklessly.”
“We’re meant to celebrate and hang around our family and friends – we don’t want to be waking up to news like my parents did on New Year’s Day.”
According to the latest statistics, speeding drivers were responsible for 41 per cent of deaths and 24 per cent of serious injuries on NSW roads. Forty-five per cent of all young Australian deaths are due to road traffic crashes and those killed, or responsible for their deaths, are aged between 17-29.
Mayor El-Hayek urged all young people to listen carefully to Tahlia’s message to slow down and speak out.
“Tahlia is reminding all young people that they are not invincible,” he said. “We don’t just see these tragedies on the news, they happen to real people.”