To officials, the victims might be numbers in reports, but to loved ones, they were everything—lives suddenly taken due to preventable negligence. The empty spaces left behind at home are reminders that the pain does not end when the road is cleared and traffic resumes.
The search for justice has only just begun. It requires honesty and responsibility from those in power—an acknowledgment that this tragedy was not unavoidable, but the result of human decisions and systemic failures. Real change must come through laws and enforcement that ensure safer conditions, so no family has to face the same loss again. The shared grief of a nation must become a force that drives improvement, proving that these lives mattered beyond statistics.
As time passes, the memory of that highway remains. The true record of the tragedy is not just in reports, but in the determination of people who refuse to forget. They stand against the tendency to move on too quickly, demanding answers and accountability. Their persistence is the only way to ensure that something meaningful comes from the loss.