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Road rage in India growing along with economy

Associated Press Featured Article

December 31, 2010

Road rage in India growing along with economy

By Associated Press ,

NEW DELHI (AP) — On a recent chilly evening, Gaurav Kumar eased his small truck onto a congested road in the Indian capital and accidentally scraped another vehicle in the honking mass of cars, scooters and motorbikes.

Enraged, the other car's driver blocked Kumar's truck and attacked him. He pulled the 24–year–old deliveryman out and shoved him so hard that his head hit the sidewalk. An hour later, Kumar died in a nearby hospital.

"It was a small scratch. For this he lost his life," Kumar's widow, Prem Latha, said by telephone from the nearby town of Aligarh, where she lives with her 7–week–old daughter.

Once rare in India, such cases of road rage are becoming routine on the streets of New Delhi, according to O.P. Mandal, the police officer investigating the Dec. 7 attack that led to Kumar's death.

"This is what we are seeing every day," Mandal said. "A minor quarrel escalates, people take the law into their hands, and a life is snuffed out."

While Indian police keep no specific numbers on traffic–related assaults, officers interviewed agree that road rage is on the rise, fueled by the country's economic boom and the masses of new vehicles it is adding to the already crowded roads.


Roughly 10 million cars, buses, trucks, scooters and motorbikes crowd New Delhi's potholed roads every day, causing long traffic jams, gridlock — and frayed tempers.

The city's roads have not kept up with traffic growth. While the vehicle count has soared 212 percent over the past two decades, the number of miles of road has grown a mere 17 percent, according to the New Delhi Transport Department.

"People are on the road longer, and everyone is on a short fuse," Satyendra Garg, the police official in charge of New Delhi traffic. "The result is a situation which begins verbally, then escalates to physical confrontation."

And because vehicles are a powerful symbol of often–newfound wealth, any scratch can feel like an assault on a person's status, he added. "So if someone scrapes their new car, they find it unacceptable and are ready to hit out."

Sociologist Abhilasha Kumari also senses a change in attitude as the country's new economic wealth makes society more materialistic.

"It's as if Delhi's centuries–old culture of graciousness has been wiped off and has been replaced by a frenetic and pushy 'me first' ruthlessness," she said.

Migrants from nearby rural areas, some newly rich from selling their land for real estate development, have also helped change the city's texture from a quiet government town to a thriving commercial hub.

"People are more upfront in their aggressiveness," Kumari added. "They believe if you have the money, you flaunt it, with your big shiny new car, and you assert yourself forcefully on the road."

Almost every day, newspapers carry reports of people being assaulted after getting into an argument on the roads.

In one recent incident, a motorist at a crowded toll booth pulled out a gun and threatened to shoot the toll collector if he served another driver who had cut in line, local papers reported.

Driving on Delhi's roads is a hazardous exercise at best. Cars and buses graze fenders with farm tractors, motorbikes and the occasional ox–driven cart.

At red lights, scooters zigzag between cars trying to get to the front. Small cars ignore lane lines and wedge themselves into any free space. Pedestrians, beggars and hawkers weave around the vehicles. It's a honking, rugby–like scrum that revs up to a slow crawl when the light turns green.

Shalu Singh, an accountant who drives to work in Delhi, said it makes her angry to see drivers breaking the rules and getting away with it.

"You have people talking on their mobile phones while driving or jumping traffic lights or tailgating you to make you drive faster," she said.

"The police are mute spectators," she added. "They feel if they stop a driver who is breaking the rules, they will hold up traffic and make the situation worse. So the offender gets away scot–free."

Maxwell Pereira, a retired police officer, said there is only so much the police can do.

"It's high time vehicle drivers learn to be civilized and follow road rules," he said.

As the situation on the roads deteriorates, he worries that even normally levelheaded drivers will resort to road rage.

"There's no saying whom it will strike next," he said. "Even the most sober and most calm person will lose his cool."

Related Images:


 In this Monday, Nov. 1, 2010 photo, an SUV driver, right, tries to forcefully make his way from the wrong side, amidst heavy traffic in New Delhi, India. Around 10 million cars, buses, trucks and an army of scooters and motorbikes pack into the cities potholed roads each day, causing unending traffic jams, frayed tempers and gridlock. A global road safety report by the World Health Organization says more people die in road accidents in India than anywhere else in the world, a phenomenon blamed on poor roads, speeding, and dangerous and reckless driving. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

 In this Monday, Nov. 1, 2010 photo, a motorcyclist enters traffic from wrong side of the road in New Delhi, India. Around 10 million cars, buses, trucks and an army of scooters and motorbikes pack into the cities potholed roads each day, causing unending traffic jams, frayed tempers and gridlock. A global road safety report by the World Health Organization says more people die in road accidents in India than anywhere else in the world, a phenomenon blamed on poor roads, speeding, and dangerous and reckless driving. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

 In this Monday, Nov. 1, 2010 photo, haphazard traffic is seen in New Delhi, India. Around 10 million cars, buses, trucks and an army of scooters and motorbikes pack into the cities potholed roads each day, causing unending traffic jams, frayed tempers and gridlock. A global road safety report by the World Health Organization says more people die in road accidents in India than anywhere else in the world, a phenomenon blamed on poor roads, speeding, and dangerous and reckless driving. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

 In this Monday, Nov. 1, 2010 photo, vehicles wait at a crossing as two-wheelers jam the traffic in New Delhi, India. Around 10 million cars, buses, trucks and an army of scooters and motorbikes pack into the cities potholed roads each day, causing unending traffic jams, frayed tempers and gridlock. A global road safety report by the World Health Organization says more people die in road accidents in India than anywhere else in the world, a phenomenon blamed on poor roads, speeding, and dangerous and reckless driving. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)



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