Ever been stuck in a traffic jam on a long flyover? It can be one of the most heartless, lonely and despairing aspects of urban living. Lifted above the human concourse down below바카라in a flat, treeless ribbon of asphalt바카라you have nothing but stilled battalions of fuming, grinding metal ahead of you. It바카라s also a most ironical thing: why should movement halt at all on an elevated road built especially so that we can glide seamlessly? Next, imagine the jam easing. You step on the gas to make up for lost time, to reach that 12.30 meeting, on the empty stretch afterward바카라and suddenly there looms into view the dreaded white-and-blue posse! For a lot of India, they always shared some traits with highway robbers. And now, a challan can mean the better part of your month바카라s salary. No wonder a drunken sod in Delhi preferred to set his mobike on fire rather than pay Rs 25,000.
Traffic, like the truth, involves us all. We experience it as a quotidian, everyday activity. But roads and mobility are much more than that. They바카라re intimately connected to growth. It바카라s the very blood of our economic life that courses through those arterial roads. Traffic reform, therefore, is a vital need: not the least because an estimated Rs 60,000 crore is lost annually in just Delhi in terms of fuel wasted in congested traffic and sundry other ways, an IIT study revealed in 2017. Imagine a national figure, tossing in 바카라traffic capital바카라 Bangalore, the north-south tunnel mess of Bombay, and everything else.
There바카라s also the human toll. India is among the world바카라s top rankers in road deaths바카라2017 saw 4.65 lakh accidents that killed 1.5 lakh people! (Another 4.7 lakh were injured.) This translates into 405 deaths and 1,290 injuries each day from 1,274 accidents바카라16 people are killed and 53 are injured every hour on Indian roads. That바카라s the official count; a fair number likely goes unreported. It바카라s in this near-anarchic situation that the government has come out with the Motor Vehicle Act, 2019, updating a 1988 law. Touted as a 바카라surgical strike바카라 to enforce traffic discipline, the astronomical fines it proposes have hit headlines everywhere바카라not to mention, let loose a kind of terror among the public across the country.


A ruined BMW in Delhi after it crashed. Road designs need to improve too..
A Forked Road
Will it work? Opinion is divided. Many officials affirm that a strongly punitive regime is the only way to drum some sense into habitually rule-breaking Indians, and indeed fresh data reveals a sudden spike in helmet sales and insurance applications (over 60 per cent of India바카라s vehicles are uninsured), as also long queues at pollution-testing centres! But sceptics abound too. Leading road safety expert Dinesh Mohan cites world data to show a penal approach can actually be counter-productive (see A Tearful Penny Lane)바카라and catches the problem from the wrong end. Other experts, too, say fines ought to be last on the bucket list of constructive measures바카라they target the weakest link, leaving every infrastructural aspect unaddressed.
Harman Singh Sidhu, who floated an NGO called ArriveSAFE in 2005, was left severely paralysed in a road accident in 1996. He has since travelled on roads in over 10 countries, including developing countries like Brazil and Turkey. There is indeed a visible difference in traffic discipline and road user behaviour everywhere compared to India, he says. 바카라But is it just because they have higher fines? Not so. The road environment guides you and most drivers naturally end up following the rules,바카라 he says. 바카라The focus should be on saving lives, which is possible only if we have a holistic approach, not just challaning drivers.바카라
In an anti-drunken driving project between US-based Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) and the Rajasthan Police, researchers found that India needed a specialised/dedicated highway force for robust enforcement. The study said that rotating sobriety checkpoints to surprise locations by the Rajasthan traffic police was much more effective than placing them in a single location바카라 rotating checkpoints reduced night accidents by 17 per cent and night deaths by 25 per cent.
So what does the MV Act 2019 have? Markedly more stringent penal provisions for traffic offenders, especially those guilty of high-risk offences such as drunken and dangerous driving, overloading, non-adherence to safety norms such as use of seat belts and helmets, new provisions to tackle juvenile driving, new norms covering pillion riders and children in a vehicle (see graphic). It바카라s exemplary punishment: offences committed by enforcing authority personnel will invite twice the penalty. And states have been granted special powers to increase penalties for compoundable offences by notifying a multiplier between 1 and 10 for each fine already prescribed. Nitin Gadkari, seen as a 바카라doer-minister바카라 within the Modi cabinet and in-charge of road transport and highways, says a consultative process preceded the legislation and is sanguine about the effect it will have (see interview). Indeed, the traffic jam right now seems to be outside RTO offices: Odisha had to open more counters and stay open even on Sundays to cope with the sudden rush!
Gadkari바카라s optimism notwithstanding, a general unease and lack of political consensus was soon visible. BJP-ruled Uttar Pradesh has implemented it, but is thinking of softening the provisions, like Gujarat, Uttarakhand, Karnataka and Jharkhand. The long list of refusers include West Bengal, Himachal, MP, Chhattisgarh, Kerala바카라. Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik has directed cops to go easy on violators for three months, while appealing to people to get all their documents ready. Punjab, Delhi and Rajasthan are yet to decide.


Take the Metro Today
Some good spinoffs are already being reported. B.R. Ravikanthe Gowda, JCP (Traffic) of Bangalore, points to a surprising development in his city: public transport ridership has increased! 바카라Commuters on BMC buses have increased by around 6.52 per cent. People have become so careful that, if they don바카라t have insurance, head gear, proper documents, they are opting for the public transport that바카라s available at their doorstep.바카라 he says. 바카라It바카라s having a positive effect. It바카라s those who were flouting rules and getting away with paying nominal amounts who are angry and protesting.바카라
Similar reports are coming in from elsewhere. Says a senior government official, 바카라As per the state reports, the fear of heavy fines has introduced a sense of fear and, hence, induced responsible behaviour.바카라 Adds Pankaj Kumar Singh, ADG (Traffic), Rajasthan: 바카라By and large, it바카라s youngsters who break rules. Rs 5,000-10,000 is a very big amount for them. Anyway, who is asking people to pay fines? Just abide by the rules.바카라 Rajasthan, of course, is still dithering on the law.
The scare was amplified by some incidents fated to hit the headlines. There was Delhi바카라s mobike-burning man, a truck in Sambalpur was fined Rs 86,000 (later settled at Rs 70,000), and an auto driver in Bhubaneswar was slapped a cumulative Rs 46,500 for a host of violations, including drunken driving. Road ministry data shows Odisha issued 4,080 challans between September 1-4, collected Rs 88.90 lakh in fines and impounded 46 vehicles. Haryana managed Rs 52.3 lakh by issuing just 343 challans in those four days. Annual collections at this rate can probably recapitalise a few public sector banks.


An overspeed detection camera on NH-24바카라a tool for effective deterrence.
Some call for a graded approach. K.K. Kapila, president emeritus of the Washington-based International Road Federation, says they had suggested a gradual increase in fines to the Union government. 바카라The amendments can바카라t be faulted. But care should be taken that fines are imposed gradually. If the increase range is from Rs 100 to Rs 1,000, the first year it should be Rs 250, then Rs 500, and the third year Rs 1,000.바카라 Supreme Court lawyer and road safety crusader Arun Mohan agrees. 바카라To educate violators, we suggest that traffic police should carry self-inking rubber stamps in green, red and orange with road safety messages and warnings on the challan copy. For example, a helmetless rider will have stamped on his challan a message like: 바카라100 two-wheeler riders met with accidents wearing helmets. Only 5 died and 15 were injured. Hundred two-wheeler riders without helmets met with accidents: 50 died, 25 were injured바카라,바카라 he says.
Some officials are on the same page. Says Divya Charan Rao, DCP (Traffic), Hyderabad: 바카라We do understand people바카라s pain. True, the new laws are meant to increase road safety. People, if counselled properly, may as well toe the line. But not by shock treatment.바카라 But a senior road ministry official says: 바카라The old law was in place for last 30 years but did no good. Whether we accept it or not, hefty fines are the only way to induce discipline. Safety drives have been going on for years, but accident figures show no significant decline.바카라
The Bobby on the Kerb
What about corruption? Aren바카라t traffic cops somewhat infamous for harassment and bribery? A Delhi traffic cop concedes, 바카라It could be true, but only sometimes. Like all professions, even traffic police has some people who could be taking advantage. We will have to make our work more transparent.바카라 He cites states that have started using IT to reduce traffic police-public interface. For example: Delhi is installing cameras for light violations and over-speeding, the challan is sent to the vehicle owner at his address or through email or SMS. 바카라You have footage as evidence,바카라 he says. Bangalore is following suit.
Says Rajasthan바카라s ADG (Traffic) Singh: 바카라I wouldn바카라t say the Act has given teeth to traffic police, but the teeth have become sharper. Today, your license can get suspended for three months under 12-13 clauses, earlier there were only five specific violations for which licenses could be suspended.바카라 Linking your license to your driving habits, as also your ability to get loans, is very normal abroad, he adds.
Singh also suggests IT-enabled reforms. 바카라Today, you can pay through card or the POS machine even at the smallest kirana shop. Why don바카라t traffic police start a system where fines are paid only through POS, card or UPI or BHIM? The message should be put out that the police department is not to be paid in cash. You can have a portal. We바카라ll have to change our way to show we바카라re more transparent, credible and reliable.바카라 Traffic police officials across states told Outlook they were in favour of weeding out cash transactions.


A Delhi traffic police writing a challan. There are calls for policing to be more transparent.
What About the Etc Etc?
Road accidents are a result of combination of factors such as human error, road defects, manufacturing defects in vehicles and worsening traffic congestion. V.S. Suresh, a lawyer specialising in motor accidents, wonders how the government can improve safety when there are no proper facilities to learn driving. 바카라Even RTOs do not have proper testing tracks. They conduct driving tests on busy roads,바카라 he points out. The road ministry official counters, 바카라Reforms are under way. Several states have adopted online testing for issuing of licenses. Besides, you can carry e-documents, they will be deemed valid. Also, a centralised system for registration and licences will be set up.바카라 However, he confesses the RTO lobby is so strong that they thwart reforms.
Activists point to another skew: the MV Act contains nearly 70 amendments, but only around 10 relating to increased penalties got implemented. There is no mention of a plan or timeline for the others바카라such as cashless treatment of accident victims during the 바카라golden hour바카라 (the hour following a traumatic injury, when medical care has the best chance of preventing death); a national road safety board; a national transportation policy. Committees are still being formed.
We are at the fag end of the UN global plan for the decade of action on road safety (2011바카라2020). A consortium of the UN, WHO and World Bank et al have studied safety solutions in different countries, evaluated them and developed a knowledge pool of best practices. Experts say India should have followed these instead of trying to address a complex problem by pulling just one thread: a punitive regime.
Mridul Bhasin, a Jaipur resident who started the NGO Muskaan to create road safety awareness after she lost her 16-year-old daughter in an accident, says a plethora of reform measures are possible, including the use of IT, no-contact challan, and training police on soft skills.
바카라Looking at the capacity of our agencies and the kind of IT we use, this law is very difficult to implement,바카라 Bhasin says. 바카라In other countries, training facilities and license systems are stringent and they use no-contact challans.바카라
Navdeep Asija, an advisor to the Punjab government on road safety, says higher fines widen the gap between the police and public and will undo the progress made towards community policing. He cites the case of Netherlands, and says: 바카라As an isolated measure, heavier penalties have little effect. But frequently conducted random checks, done very visibly, do reduce violations.바카라 India has a paltry 5:20,000 ratio of traffic cops to vehicles바카라on an average, a vehicle is challaned once in four or five years. 바카라Frequent fines, even Rs 100, are more of a deterrent than a bigger fine of Rs 5,000 once in five years,바카라 Asija says.
Kulanthayan K.C. Mani, associate professor at Universiti Putra Malaysia, too favours increasing enforcement, both manually and electronically, with existing traffic rules바카라to increase the probability of being seen violating rules. 바카라Once the probability of being seen goes up, road users change their behaviour: they know they are being watched,바카라 Mani says. An executive director with Safe Kids Malaysia, Mani adds, 바카라The next stage is the probability of being stopped, the last is being penalised. That바카라s the full enforcement cycle.바카라 The idea is, if the first is high, the latter two drop anyway바카라a virtuous cycle.
Another serious flaw: not looking at road design and, instead, hitting at the weakest link. Road construction norms are a scream in India, but only if someone dies on account of a bad road does the law look at the other side바카라imposing a fine of Rs 1 lakh on the contractor or the consultant. Manoj Wadhwa, a Faridabad resident, lived through a tragic shock. His bike got into a pothole, causing the instant death of his 3-year-old son and severely injuring his wife. He has since fought a long battle to get companies like L&T and DA Toll Road Pvt Ltd implicated in a criminal case. Says Wadhwa, 바카라Any potholes, flaw in road design, poor maintenance, use of poor material for roads, defunct traffic signals바카라all of that should be fined. Repeat offenders must be punished. Not after it leads to someone바카라s death, much before that.바카라 He wonders why government officials and contractors are not jailed for dereliction of duty. 바카라Only penalising drivers harshly will create discontentment,바카라 Wadhwa says.
To be fair, some of the 바카라political바카라 criticism바카라West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee termed the new law 바카라very harsh바카라바카라is a bit surprising. The law was indeed preceded by a consultation with state transport ministers, after an empowered committee was formed in February 2016 under then Rajasthan transport minister Yunus Khan. At three meetings where all state transport ministers were invited, only 18-20 ministers turned up. Instead of raising their concerns then, states are reacting post facto. Even Gujarat has slashed all fines by 50 per cent.
Transportation is a state subject, so states have the right to mould the MV Act 2019 in their own ways. But how exactly does a universal thing like traffic allow for regional differences? Perhaps it바카라s not traffic behaviour, but the perspective on what the best solution is that differs. Our goal should be universal, though. As a signatory to the Brasilia Declaration, India is committed to reducing the number of road accidents and fatalities by 50 per cent by 2020. No one can criticise that.
***
Vehicles And People On Roads
- 22.60 crore Total Vehicles Registered
- 1.41 crore Vehicles Registered in 2019
- 8.9 crore Total Driving Licenses Issued
- 46.94 lakh Driving Licenses Issued in 2019
Source; Vahan and Sarathi portals of central government
Data from 1970 to Aug. 2019
By Jyotika Sood and Jeevan Prakash with inputs from Salik Ahmad in Delhi, G.C. Shekhar in Chennai, M.S. Shanker in Hyderabad and Sandeep Sahu in Bhubaneswar