A Delhi Transport Corporation (DTC) bus, travelling at excessive speed on a narrow connecting street in east Delhi's Vishwas Nagar area, collided with a motorcycle, an e-rickshaw, and a school van around 12:20 p.m. on Tuesday, injuring four people, including an eight-year-old boy who lost a tooth. The multi-vehicle accident, captured on CCTV footage, has prompted calls from locals for stricter speed enforcement and better traffic controls in the densely populated neighbourhood near Karkardooma Court.
The bus, en route from Karkardooma Court to 60 Feet Road, was heading toward the vehicles travelling in the opposite direction when the driver lost control. Video evidence shows the bus dragging the motorcycle before slamming into the e-rickshaw, which spun around and struck the school van sideways. The impact hurled the vehicles out of frame, leaving a discarded helmet spinning on the road as the sole visible remnant of the chaos.
The school van driver recounted the terror, stating, "I am still in shock. Everything happened in a matter of seconds. This wasn't a highway or a main road; it was just a narrow connecting street, but the bus was still being driven at a very high speed." DTC buses, vital for Delhi's public transport network serving over 40 lakh passengers daily, have faced scrutiny for frequent accidents amid rising urban congestion and inadequate driver training.
Among the injured were two motorcyclists, Satish and Mahesh, both with minor injuries, and e-rickshaw driver Mahesh, who also sustained light wounds. All three adults were treated at Hedgewar Hospital and discharged. The most vulnerable victim, an eight-year-old student from Sarvodaya Vidyalaya school, suffered a broken tooth and required immediate medical attention. E-rickshaws, a common sight in Delhi's informal transport ecosystem, often navigate tight lanes without dedicated infrastructure, heightening risks in such incidents. The child was part of a group being ferried home after school hours, amplifying parental fears over road safety near educational hubs.
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The bus driver fled the scene but was apprehended shortly after by Shahdara police, who registered a case under relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code for rash and negligent driving endangering human life. Delhi Police's Deputy Commissioner of Police (Shahdara) confirmed the detention and ongoing investigation, including analysis of the CCTV footage to determine if mechanical failure contributed.
This crash adds to a troubling pattern: Delhi reported over 1,500 road accidents in the first half of 2025 alone, with speeding cited in 40% of cases, according to National Crime Records Bureau data. Residents of Vishwas Nagar, a bustling middle-class enclave with narrow bylanes ill-equipped for heavy vehicles, have long petitioned for speed breakers, rumble strips, and dedicated bus lanes. Community leaders urged the Municipal Corporation of Delhi to expedite infrastructure upgrades, warning that without intervention, such tragedies could recur in areas strained by rapid urbanisation and mixed traffic.
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