Why Traffic Violation should be the Rule – not exception – in India?
K S VENKATARAMAN A few months back, a friend had come from Singapore. The hotel management had given a car for our use. He had not come to India earlier. Just within five minutes, after watching the style and behavior of the driver, he asked, “Are you not at all afraid of the cops?” The driver promptly replied, “Why should I? If he catches for anything, what is needed is only Rs.50. He is going to get it from me and go back like a dog.” A few months back, the traffic police had booked the son of the British Premier for traffic rule violation and had taken him to custody. The Premier went in person to the police station, tendered apology on behalf of his son and promised to be more careful in future and got his son released. Outside the police station, he talked to journalists as a parent and shared his worries with them about the growing recklessness of the youngsters and difficulties of parenting. We have inherited most of our political institutions from the British. Can we imagine an
Related Questions
- I get one or more of the following messages Security Violation. java.lang.verify error, Applet exception:java.lang.ClassFormatError and the chat applet does not load, what do I do?
- The Notice of Final Action Letter for my land use says that my project may qualify for an exception to the traffic study. What does that mean?
- Is Jail Time Associated With a Red Light Traffic Violation?