Hindustan Times (Delhi)

With first-ever policy, Delhi to identify and fix its killer roads

- Sweta Goswami sweta.goswami@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 22 RELATED REPORT P18

NEWDELHI: Every fatal road accident in Delhi will have to be scientific­ally investigat­ed within three months to zero in area-specific traffic problems and road engineerin­g defects that may have caused it, according to the city-state’s first road safety policy. The ‘Delhi Road Safety Policy’, which was approved by state transport minister Kailash Gahlot on Friday, wants the police, transport department and road operators to reduce accidents and fatalities by 30% by 2020 and by 80% by 2025.

Once the policy is notified, the transport department will have to set up special teams at the state and district levels to conduct scientific accident investigat­ions using simulation techniques. The policy mandates training every two years for all officials — from junior engineers Car occupants Cyclists Slow-moving pullers to chief engineers — and police officers.

With five deaths per day, Delhi records the highest number of fatal accidents among all cities in India. Roads in the national capital are particular­ly unsafe for pedestrian­s, who make up nearly 43% of all fatali- Other drivers ties. The next most vulnerable are those on two-wheelers, accounting for 36%.

The sharing of expertise among the police, transport department and road owners, including the public works department, and the Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA), help make the roads safer, an expert said.

“The problem is there is no capacity-building workshops because of which the expertise that the police has is not shared by government road engineers and vice versa. Every officer involved in building and maintainin­g roads and traffic needs holistic training at regular intervals,” said K Ravinder, an official in the transport planning division of the Central Road Research Institute.

According to the road safety policy, agencies will have to conduct anti-encroachme­nt drives to clear carriagewa­ys and pedestrian walkways. One such drive was conducted on Friday in which encroachme­nts on stretches of the Mehrauli-badarpur Road, Andheria Mod and Chirag Dilli were removed by the south district administra­tion.

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 ??  ?? 3.3% 36%
Two-wheeler riders
2.1% 11.6%
3.3% 36% Two-wheeler riders 2.1% 11.6%

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