Roads Please Give Me A Break

<i>Road traffic in Delhi is like a road rage on routine</i>

<p>The metro cities are known by their road traffic. Increasing road traffic and congestion puts road safety on a receiving end. <a href="http://www.easydriveforum.com">Road traffic in India</a> is like a road rage on routine. I found that incidents of road rage are a common place. What a road disciplinarian would find shocking enough. </p>

<p>Coming from less congested cities, I never enjoyed the real driving on roads in Delhi as I once thought I would. Not very long back traffic conditions were still better. Lesser instances of road rage and some semblance of ensured you reached everywhere and returned home safe. </p>

<p>Metro cities have Herculean task managing their road traffic. Having lived in Calcutta I know how slow and unmanageable <a href="http://www.easydriveforum.com">Kolkata traffic</a> is. There are auto rickshaws, cars and all sorts of vehicles of all sizes and shapes. Even a bullock cart you will find sharing those roads with the latest from the Mercedes stable. </p>

<p>Mumbai is a city of distances, and local trains connect the length and breadth of the metro. However, all the roads take you to one local train station another. The disruption of the Mumbai traffic is usually caused by rains and that happens almost every year, which put life out of gear. </p>

<p>Likewise, Bangalore emerging as an employment hub and the Silicon Valley of the subcontinent is unable to accommodate any more vehicles on its roads. As it is, roads are narrow and congestion prone. Chennai traffic has no better experience to offer either. </p>

<p>The pleasure of owning a fast moving car ceases as soon as you hit the road from your car’s delivery point. No matter which car you own or drive and how well you can drive, there is no guarantee for your safety. You do not drive at your wish and pace but what others ask you do. </p>

<p>About roads, it is bad; about <a href="http://www.easydriveforum.com">road safety in India</a> it is worse. You fume – please give me a break.</p>



About the Author:
Abhimanyu Singh is a contributing author to the website Easy Drive Forum, It is the first ever Indian Road Traffic forum, It brings lots of Indian road users to a common platform, where they can discuss Road safety in India, Indian Traffic rules, Indian Road Traffic, Delhi Traffic, Bangalore Traffic, Mumbai Traffic etc.

Mon, 17 Dec 2007 12:21:23 - 100%


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