Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

States supported high fines in new MV Act

- Sunetra Choudhury sunetra.choudhury@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: A bunch of states have balked at enforcing sharply higher fines prescribed by the amended Motor Vehicles Act for traffic violations, ranging from riding a bike without a helmet to driving under the influence, but it emerges that all of them had been in agreement with the Centre on the need for the increased penalties and signed off on the changes to the law before it was notified.

Some states like Gujarat that had reservatio­ns over provisions of the Motor Vehicles Amendment Act 2019 had even hosted meetings for other state ministers to discuss issues related to road safety.

The Transport Developmen­t Committee, comprising state transport ministers, held five meetings since 2016 to discuss amendments to the Act, and federal transport ministry officials say that no dissent notes were submitted by any state.

Hindustan Times has accessed the minutes of all the meetings, which were held in Delhi, Bengaluru, Dharamshal­a, Thiruvanan­thapuram and the concluding one in Guwahati last year, to corroborat­e the claims. The amended MV Act came into force on September 1 after being passed by Parliament in July this year.

The MV Act increased penalties for a host of traffic violations, including by as much as 500% to 1000% for drunk driving and speeding with fines ranging from ~4,000 to ~10,000, as it sought to deter unsafe driving in an attempt to reduce casualties in traffic accidents and make Indian roads safer.

“This requires implementa­tion and enforcemen­t because at the end of the day, if you look at the number of accidents, the most vulnerable are the pedestrian­s. The loss of lives due to accidents is just unacceptab­le so we need political support for this,” said Anumita Roychowdhu­ry, execu

tive director, Centre for Science and Environmen­t.

Almost a dozen states have opted to enforce lower penalties, or delay their introducti­on. following a public outcry.

“States have misconcept­ion on the law; they have the right to decide the fines for compoundab­le offences, not the rest. The law went through multiple stages of consultati­on where all states supported it. After that, it got Cabinet approval and was then introduced in the Lok Sabha,” said minister for road transport and highways, Nitin Gadkari.

On Thursday, transporte­rs in some parts of India, including Delhi, staged a strike against the provisions which drew little response.

“Why do people not see the prime reason behind passage of the law is to save lives,” Gadkari said, adding that 55% of the road fatalities belonged to the 18-35 year age group. “Do we not have a responsibi­lity to their families? There is no fear of law in India, that is why we are in such a state.”

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-ruled Gujarat, which was the first state to decide not to go with Gadkari’s pet project, even held a meeting with all state transport ministers or their representa­tives to discuss this as part of its road safety meeting in September 2017.

“In Vadodara, I went with Gadkariji and they were all there and they were all in agreement,’’ said Younus Khan, who was transport minister in the then BJP government of Rajasthan and head of the Transport Developmen­t Committee. “That was where we decided that we can’t have cheap fines. The Gujarat transport minister was there and it was assented {to} by all.”

Gujarat transport minister RC Faldu, when contacted by Hindustan Times, said the state government “never opposed the changes made in the MV Act”.

Explaining the reason for not implementi­ng the prescribed penalties, Faldu said that “following widespread complaints from people about inconvenie­nce in getting PUC [pollution under control certificat­e] , licence and helmet, it has been postponed”.

In various states like Delhi, there have been queues that last hours just to get PUC certificat­es and many felt it was because the back-end operation wasn’t put into place before implementa­tion. On revising penalties under compoundab­le offences (fines for traffic violations that can be paid on the spot), he said flexibilit­y has been provided in the central law. The minutes of the meeting that was held observed that all members were committed “to look into issues of Road Safety” and no dissent notes were given.

Karnataka is now under a BJP government, which has opposed higher penalties, but the then Congress government in the state had endorsed higher penalties in a meeting in Bengaluru in 2016. The minutes of the meeting notes that on “enhancemen­t of penalties... we propose enhancemen­t of penalties for violation of traffic regulation­s so that they act as a deterrent.” Signatorie­s included the transport ministers of Chattisgar­h, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka and also transport commission­er Kamal Dayani of Gujarat. Maharashtr­a, which has also opposed the amended penalties, also sent its transport commission­er Shyam Wardhane.Khan is a bit surprised by the complete U-turn made by states now. “Whoever had a problem, we met them personally and sorted it out. The Maharashtr­a transport minister came for our Dharamshal­a meeting and again it was discussed there,” he said. “They should have been explaining the logic of higher fines to people and how it saves lives instead of doing their political agenda.’’

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