Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Perfect storm hits Delhi roads

COMMUTER WOES Monsoon snarls, autoricksh­aw strike and kanwar yatra add up to misery; no relief around the corner

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: An ongoing auto strike, road blocks put in place for smooth passage of kanwariyas (pilgrims) and a forecast of heavy rain could make commuting in Delhi-NCR a nightmare on Thursday.

Wednesday was no better. Traffic crawled and people spent hours on waterlogge­d roads as heavy showers lashed the Capital for the second day.

Public transport took a hit with autoricksh­aw and taxi unions continuing their indefinite stir in demand of a ban on app-based taxi services — which added to commuters’ woes by indulging in surge pricing as the demand for cabs shot up.

The Delhi government met representa­tives from 17 of the 20-odd striking auto unions and said it had persuaded them to call off the stir. But the claim was rejected by the Delhi Pradesh Taxi Union.

The Capital has 85,000 autos and the striking taxi unions account for around 20,000 cabs. Some autos and taxis were plying on the sly but the strike was near total.

“I waited half an hour for an auto and when I finally got one, the driver demanded `100 for a 4km ride. I had no option but to pay up as I was getting late for work,” Ankita Khanna said of her commute from Jangpura to East of Kailash.

Sunil Nair complained that taxi aggregator­s were taking advantage of the situation. “Cab aggregator services have started to charge more than usual again. Finding a cab is already difficult but getting an affordable ride is even tougher.”

He ended up paying `375 from Saket to Connaught Place, a trip that costs him `200 on a normal day.

Adding to the mess, diversions and restrictio­ns on many arterial roads, especially in east Delhi and the NCR towns of Gurgaon and Ghaziabad, will remain in place till August 1 due to the march of the kanwariyas.

Roadside camps for the Shiva devotees — journeying to Uttarakhan­d and Bihar to fetch water from the Ganga — contribute­d to snarls. The trouble spots included national highways 8 and 24, Rani Jhansi Road, Azad Market Chowk, Khajuri Chowk and Mathura Road.

“We have made arrangemen­ts to segregate the movement of kanwariyas and other road users and to minimise inconvenie­nce to both. The devotees and commuters are advised to follow traffic rules. Violators will face on-the-spot prosecutio­n,” said joint commission­er of police (traffic) Garima Bhatnagar.

 ?? RAJ K RAJ / HT PHOTO ?? Many passengers were stranded at the New Delhi railway station in the absence of autoricksh­aws and taxis on Wednesday. Heavy rains worsened their plight.
RAJ K RAJ / HT PHOTO Many passengers were stranded at the New Delhi railway station in the absence of autoricksh­aws and taxis on Wednesday. Heavy rains worsened their plight.

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