SafeSpeed wrote:
Gixxer wrote:
shauvik_bit wrote:
More than 100,000 people are dying on Indian roads every year.
Given the standard of driving in India that I have seen first hand, I'm surprised the body count isn't higher.
It is of course the immature road safety culture that results in the standards of driving observed.
Anyone who has travelled on India's roads will tell you the road safety culture is not immature. It is non existant.
It's only the relatively low speeds which prevent the carnage being much worse. Although those same low speeds allow people to get away with things they would never attempt here.
Things I noticed from my time there.
Traffic lights are at best advisory, mostly ignored.
Both sides of a dual carriageway will be used for traffic in both directions. You can imagine what happens when you have HGVs mixing it with cars, mixing it with bicycles and camels and elephants. More often than not dangerously overloaded and in a poor state of repair (and that's just the elephants

).
If you come up behind a slower vehicle and can't see anything coming then you overtake. Even if the reason you can't see anything is that you are approaching a blind bend.
Everyone is constantly using the horn, not through frustration but to warn other road users of their presence. Our driver was much more concerned when his horn stopped working than when his wipers failed during a thunderstorm.