@dunhill1984 - When you enter a parking bay with enough movement, you'd bring it to a halt by applying the brakes slowly and then finally braking fully. I understand your point - Sometimes (esp. when you need more power), you use accelerator to move within the bay and apply brakes at the very end. I understand the whole "sudden unintended acceleration" thing is quite unexpected and difficult to believe till you experience it yourself, and I frankly quizzed my wife many times initially
She is a very safe driver, btw with a clean driving record and this was an easy to park bay, being a wide "parent and child" parking bay.
@Willpower - Yes, the failure reports look very strikingly similar. Infact, I read the first one when we were at the dealer's immediately after the accident, getting the car checked for faults. The similarity with what we encountered was very striking to be frank - Almost like this only happens in supermarkets and during parking! It is the similarity that further concerns me and convinced me that there is indeed a vehicle fault at play. There is an NHTSA complaint (DVSA equivalent in US) as well for this - I think we need to take the complaint as a serious one. No one would really bother with all this energy on raising NHTSA/DVSA complaints, etc. if they were simply trying to cover up driver error (Honestly, from experience, these conversations with the dealer and the company suck out all energy you have and I would have given up if not for the concern around risk and feeling of being treated unfairly just 3 months into ownership).
Mazda UK and my local dealer (Brayleys Harpenden) have conveyed they are "unable to find any faults that could cause the accident", but refuse to give me more evidence of what they have checked and also refuse to confirm if the vehicle is safe to drive - Really shocking considering I just bought the car from them 3 months ago! The dealer I bought the car from (about 50 miles away in Croydon) was initially all warm and ready to help, but as we got into the detail, said they would only do the same diagnostics as the local dealer and strangely said that "they can do more tests but cannot change the outcome". I would really have expected them to instill confidence in the customer by 1. doing a check of the EDR log to confirm how crash happened and 2. do a check of the parts that are likely to cause issues (starting with the oft-repeated 'loose mats', pedals, etc.) and confirm that the vehicle is safe and road-worthy. If they cannot do more, in my opinion, they are only passing on the risk to the customer, a bit like Boeing had just refused to acknowledge issues with its 737 Max planes, till fatal accidents occurred.
I am in the process of raising this with the Motor Ombudsman and the DVSA, but if you have any suggestions or additional evidence (other reported issues), that would greatly help.