Driving to death

Author: Javaid Iqbal Bhat

The annual day function of a school was underway the past week, and a loud noise came from outside. From the sound it seemed that a vehicle had unloaded stones. With that assumption, the function continued, with students performing to their best in the presence of guests, teachers and parents. A moment later the Principal broke in to confirm that two men are down on the road, bleeding to death.

An accident had occurred; the tipper had not unloaded but crushed two men on bike just meters away from the school. While he looked for water to drink, the function stopped and we went toward the site. A woman from a neighbouring house was washing the blood off the road. One had died on the spot and the other one, semi-dead, was taken to the hospital. The woman, with a broom in hand and looking at no one in particular, rued the fact that accidents happened so often next to her home. The tipper had veered off into a ploughed field, with the bike broken to pieces underneath the vehicle. The helmet had come off the biker, but not a chink in its surface. The tipper driver had run away, with the key still placed there inside the key-hole. As people broke into separate knots speculating about cause and thinking of a speed-breaker, two more souls had fallen victim on the road.

According to global studies, wearing of seatbelts reduces risk of death by 45 percent and cuts risk of serious injury by 50 percent. Moreover, people not wearing seatbelts are 30 times more likely to be thrown out of a vehicle in a crash. Add on to this the absent helmets, the reckless speed, the narrow roads, mixed driving on roads, and a host of not-so-small issues, and you get a doomsday scenario on the road. On top of that the delay and mishandling of the accident victim between the site of accident and the hospital. The role of the victim in the infliction of lethal wound is no less than that of the asleep law enforcement authorities.

The threat of effective and impartial punishment carries the potential of seeing roads without unnecessary spillage of blood. The law is the leveller. Its swift and fair execution will rescue individuals from their irrational and fatal whims

Leaving aside what law enforcement authorities are doing, and they are doing no good by turning a blind eye, why is it that driving precautions are not taken, even after knowing that, for example, not wearing a helmet can be fatal? Perhaps it is a matter of social perception. That nothing is going to happen if the person does not take precautions. Or that it is a matter of fate. One will die where it is fore-written in sky, behind the clouds. Or maybe it is because of the fear of stereotyping. Some may think that there are air-balloons to take care of (research proves otherwise) or the thread he has tied in some shrine, or the extra prayers he does to pre-empt disasters. However, all of that is useless, unless protection is ensured, with the application of your head. Machines, unless used under the rational command, have a way of turning into perfect enemies. The old Arab saying is trust in God but tie up your camel.

In the case of the accident mentioned at the beginning, only one person was wearing a helmet, and the latter was unharmed under the tipper. It seems that because of the crash, the helmet came off, otherwise the head was safe. We do not exactly know who is to be blamed in the case of the accident but it is certain that one who took precautions is least prone to receiving a fatal injury. Extend the nature of precautions, from helmets to seat-belts to speed, and the same logic of proneness applies.

Going from individual to individual and hoping for a change in the mindset, you need the patience of a prophet, and the latter to go from one driver to another, pleading for a change of approach on the roads. To convert a mass in the modern times, you need the stick of the law. The latter embodies the sanity of a collective. The threat of effective and impartial punishment carries the potential of seeing roads without unnecessary spillage of blood. The law is the leveller. Its swift and fair execution will rescue individuals from their irrational and fatal whims. But if law has not done anything until now, from the blind issuing of licenses to the crowded vehicles and narrow roads, what hope is there that some miraculous intervention will change the scene now. Practically speaking, law is in slumber but does it really mean that we will play with our lives until the legal machinery wakes up? You are responsible for your actions not for the resuscitation of the life and limbs of the law, so it is understandable that one must rely on one’s own agency, and not make a plaything our lives or convert ourselves into Shakespeare’s ‘flies’ before the wanton boys of the law.

The writer can be reached at javjnu@gmail. com

Published in Daily Times, November 22nd 2017.

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