Even
the staunch atheist shall start believing in God on Indian roads. To wriggle
out safely from the chaos and confusion that reigns on Indian roads one
shall definitely need a divine intervention. As a matter of fact one can find an
idol or godly inscription/memento on the dashboard of most vehicles.
When the
talk show queen & media mogul Oprah Winfrey visited India sometime back,
after experiencing the traffic on Indian roads, she reportedly remarked-“what
is it with the red light mean stop or not? Or is it just for your
entertainment?” She supposedly compared traffic on Indian roads to a scary
video games where one keeps wondering what’s going to hit suddenly.
Well!
Comments of Winfrey must not come as a surprise to us for we all are part of it
everyday. Oprah Winfrey saw calm beneath chaos on India. Driving in India for
more than two decades, I see the ‘species of drivers’ causing all the mayhem
amidst this chaos.
If there was ever classification of chaos, this is it! Here is for the first time, drivers on Indian roads decoded:
1.
Lane Cutters- If you happen to find lanes on Indian roads, then
you would definitely find lane- cutters. They cut lanes anytime anywhere and
everywhere.
2.
Slow Movers- Blissfully unaware of the amount of inconvenience that they
cause to others, the ‘slow movers’ move at snail-pace in the middle of the
road.
3.
Slow Blockers-Unlike ‘slow movers’ they not only move slowly but
intentionally block other traffic. They somehow derive a sadist pleasure out of
keeping others at bay, even when they move slowly.
4.
Jumping Jacks-The name comes from the famous yesteryear Bollywood
hero known for his calisthenics on-screen. Some motorists seem to do similar
jumping acts on road. All of a sudden a vehicle would jump in front of your’s,
testing your braking skills.
5.
Screechers- The last thing that comes to the mind of such motorist is
brakes .And when it does they apply the same with full gusto. The result is not
only a screeching halt but a sudden panic for the followers.
6.
Unstoppable - Newton’s law of inertia stated that a body continues
to be in a state of rest or motion unless acted upon by an external force. In
case of unstoppable, no external force seems to act once there are in state of motion.
So nothing stops them, not even the red traffic lights (Oprah remarks have been caused by one of these unstoppable).
7.
Sneakers- This species of
motorist must have lived in narrow burrows or by-lanes, and hence sneaking has become an irresistible habit.
They sneak-in between the traffic at the slightest opportunity.
8.
Dare Devils- The second word describes
them better than the first one. These are the Road- Rambos doing stunts at the
cost of safety and lives of others & of their own.
9.
Big Bully- If you have seen the public transport buses &
over-loaded lorries, then you would perfectly understand the big bully. They
move, cut (lanes) and stop at will. You better not take them- on, if you love
your family.
10.
Parking Dunces- If you do not know how to park, you don’t know how
to drive-‘parking dunces’ are a nightmare for others. They park poorly, many a
times at wrong places, as if it is their birth-right.
11.
Desperadoes- ‘Desperadoes’ are always missing a flight or an
important appointment /meeting(not that they actually missing one)& hence
are running on their vehicles. ‘Hurry’
seems to be their second name and they ensure to make curry of the rest of the
traffic.
12.
Road Runners - Crossing a busy road in
India is an life-death adventure and hit or miss the zebra-crossing is not
respected, of course if there is one and
hence road runners are at large.
13.
Dribble King- They could put the Pele, Maradonas,& Messis to shame by their
dribbling skills, only if they did the same on the sports field. Instead they
shamelessly try such skills with their vehicles(mostly bikes) on the road.
14.
Cautious Rookie- Everyone who has licence
knows to drive! Really! This rule doesn't apply everywhere (don’t be
surprised!!!) and hence is born the cautions rookie who is probably the new driver on the block testing his/her skills right in the middle of the
traffic, adding more to the chaos. Go back to the school, man!
15.
Romeos- And, how can we forget
the Romeos who have just had a ’Skyfall’ and are leaving no stone unturned to
impress their dames…. The only problem is that they have chosen the road for
the ‘salsa’. So bingo, be ready to dance with them & face the music!
16. Minor- Under-aged kids encouraged by their too adventurous parents taking to the wheels put themselves and everyone else on the road at risk. recently an accident in Bangalore involved a minor driver. Shameful, really!
Not that there aren't any good men and ladies behind the wheels but they are a crying minority, being constantly bullied by the one or more these not-so sweet sixteen Ds'.
So
what if this chaos means inconvenience to millions, wastage of tonnes of
precious productive time, immeasurable stress to commuters and what if it has
earned India the dubious distinction of the country with maximum number of road
accident deaths(in excess of 142,000) in the world? We still continue to add
and adjust to this chaos.
Number of Road Accidents and
Number of Persons Involved: 2002 to 2011
|
|||||
Year
|
Number of Accidents
|
Number of Persons
|
Accident
Severity*
|
||
Total
|
Fatal
|
killed
|
Injured
|
||
2002
|
4,07,497
|
73,650(18.1)
|
84,674
|
408,711
|
20.8
|
2003
|
4,06,726
|
73,589(18.1)
|
85,998
|
435,122
|
21.1
|
2004
|
4,29,910
|
79,357(18.5)
|
92,618
|
464,521
|
21.5
|
2005
|
4,39,255
|
83,491(19.0)
|
94,968
|
465,282
|
21.6
|
2006
|
4,60,920
|
93,917(20.4)
|
105,749
|
496,481
|
22.9
|
2007
|
4,79,216
|
1,01,161(21.1)
|
114,444
|
513,340
|
23.9
|
2008
|
4,84,704
|
1,06,591(22.0)
|
119,860
|
523,193
|
24.7
|
2009
|
4,86,384
|
1,10,993(22.8)
|
125,660
|
515,458
|
25.8
|
2010
|
4,99,628
|
1,19,558(23.9)
|
134,513
|
527,512
|
26.9
|
2011(P)
|
4,97,686
|
1,21,618(24.4)
|
1,42,485
|
5,11,394
|
28.6
|
(P): Provisional
Figures within parentheses
indicate share of fatal accidents to total accidents
*Accident Severity: No. of
persons killed per 100 accidents
Source: Road Accidents in
India 2011 report (morth.nic.in)
|
As much it is important to engage, I think it is also important for companies to decide whom not to engage?
Hire for attitude and train for skill is the golden principle. Trying to engage with everyone means we fundamentally believe that anyone can be on-board. Jim Collins had very correctly said – ‘Get the right people on the bus and then decide where to drive that bus’. ‘Right’ is the operative word. And that cannot have a single dimension interpretation. Right has to be looked as much from the competency perspective, it must also be looked from the attitudinal and behavioural perspective. Bad hires have been bleeding companies.
6 comments:
Good one Deb! Nicely put together!
Thanks Naveen. Glad you liked it.
Cheers,
Debashish
Driving in chorus on 2 wheelers is also observed on india roads, which creates trouble for others.
Nice thing to read. Thanking you Sir for writing....
some more curious species have evolved in the Urban Indian Jungle namely
1) Those who traverse the road on the wrong way- one way or not is no deterrence. they have a certain brazenness also. On bumping into you they actually turn and abuse or worse get physically agitated. One needs all the pugilistic skills that one can summon in order to stave off the threat.
2) The other group consists of jaywalkers who sway out of the way of traffic from behind- they get struck literally right behind. And to all concerned except the motorist and the fallen, the entire episode is quite amusing.
Of course the motorist is on occasion set alight. For just being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Thanks Akash and Vishnu for your comments.
Best,
Debashish
there are High beamers too, looks like star fleet is recruiting! :P
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