Supreme Court (SC) issues pan-India Road Safety directions | Current Affairs | Vision IAS

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ESC

In Summary

  • SC invoked Article 142, stating road safety is part of Article 21's right to life, imposing a positive duty on the State.
  • National Highways, 2% of road length, account for 30% of road fatalities, necessitating infrastructure improvements and surveillance.
  • Directions include District Highway Safety Task Forces, blackspot rectification, and MoRTH establishing an inter-state safety committee for standardized enforcement.

In Summary

In Phalodi Accident v. National Highways Authority of India, the SC warned that expressways must not become “corridors of peril” due to administrative or infrastructural failures.

  • It invoked Article 142 of the Constitution of India to issue nationwide directions.

Key Observations

  • The SC held that road safety is part of the right to life and dignity under Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
    • It clarified that Article 21 creates a positive duty on the State to ensure safe roads.
  • National Highways (NHs) constitute approximately 2% of India’s total road length but account for nearly 30% of all road fatalities.

Key Directions issued by the SC

  • District Highway Safety Task Force: Dedicated highway safety task forces must be set up in relevant districts (wherever the NH passes through) for coordination.
  • Infrastructure Improvement: Roads must have proper lighting, signage, markings, and crash barriers as per safety standards.
  • Surveillance & Patrolling: Regular highway patrolling and an Advanced Traffic Management System-based monitoring must be ensured (e.g., CCTV cameras, speed detectors, emergency call boxes).
  • Blackspot Rectification: Accident-prone areas must be identified and fix within a time-bound framework.
  • Institutional Coordination: The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) must create an inter-state safety committee to standardise enforcement (e.g., uniform driving-hour limits, common penalty rules across states). 
  • Others: Illegal Parking Ban, Emergency Response deployed at regular intervals, safe parking and rest facilities etc.
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Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH)

A nodal government ministry in India responsible for the development, construction, and maintenance of national highways, as well as promoting road safety and transport-related policies.

Blackspot Rectification

The process of identifying locations on roads that have a high incidence of accidents (blackspots) and implementing specific engineering or infrastructural solutions to eliminate or reduce the accident rate at these points.

Advanced Traffic Management System (ATMS)

A technological system implemented on highways to manage traffic flow efficiently, improve safety, and reduce congestion. Its implementation is mandated by the MV Amendment Act, 2019.

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