■ Vijay Phanshikar :
THAT the capital city of
Madhya Pradesh -- Bhopal
-- should allow chaos to
prevail on its roads, sends
to the world only a poor
message about the
efficiency (?) of the
administration. In the long
term, it also casts a poor
light on the State
Government whose seat
power is housed in Bhopal.
‘The Hitavada’ series on
Chaos on Roads of Bhopal
brings to fore the pathetic
condition of roads and
poor traffic management.
Frankly, this was the case
just until a couple of years
ago. There were glitches all
right, but their extent had
not sunk to the current low
-- which makes the
Bhopalites feel insecure or
roads and rather slighted in
the head and heart that
they have to endure such a
situation for no fault of
their own.
This may be true that the
people have to suffer for
the lapses of the civic
administration controlling
the State Capital. However,
it is also equally true that
the current pathetic traffic
management -- which also
includes defunct traffic
signals -- is of the making
of the civic authorities
that chose to slumber while
things went from
bad to worse.
Now, the situation has
sunk to such a low that
every citizen of Bhopal has
something or other to say
by way of complaint --
about chaos on roads.
With
increasing numbers of
private vehicles, with
increased numbers of
Government vehicles on
the roads, with increased
numbers also of the
day-to-day visitors to the
city from all parts of the
State the situation is
getting out of hand every
passing day.
The loosefooter realises
this as he and his
colleagues in ‘The
Hitavada’ move around the
city on assignments and
see and sense the troubles
the common road-users
have to face on account of
bad road and traffic
management.
If this is the condition in
the State capital, we can
imagine what may be
happening elsewhere in the
State, let alone a few good
exceptions of some cities or
towns.
However, the seeds of
what is happening now on
Bhopal roads had been
foreseen by some people
who could peep deep into
future. The loosefooter is
aware of the discussion
about such ugly prospects
about Bhopal traffic in the
higher layers of the State
bureaucracy a few years ago.
In those official
conversations and
meetings, many
knowledgeable bureaucrats
had fore-cautioned the State
Government about the
impending crisis on Bhopal
roads a few years later.
Those early warnings
were unfortunately ignored
-- and the outcome is there
for everybody to see and
sense. Had those early
signs of the future
decadence were seen at
right time and acted upon,
the current chaos on roads
may never have happened.
But the expectation now
is that the administration
wakes up fast and starts the
process of rectification the
soonest.
For, for people like the
loosefooter, seeing their
own city trapped in such a
condition of helplessness is
a terrible experience