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Need for speed

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  • Bangalore’s international airport is six months old.  The tally so far: number of weeks airport operational — 26; number killed on the road to the airport — 36, mainly villagers.

    The story of the road to the new airport is the story of Nallamma.  Each Sunday morning, Nallamma, 35, faces a quandary.  As part of a ritual, the construction worker comes from a nearby village to the ‘new’ airport road to catch a bus to the weekly market a few kilometers away, to buy rations. She described her dilemma: to get to the bus-stop, should she dart across the busy road at the nearest point while trying to avoid the buses and cabs tearing past at dizzying speeds; or, should she walk to the busy Sadahalli Gate and clamber on to a bus slowing at the traffic light?

    In a rush to launch a new airport, airport planners and city officials have arrogantly spared no thought to these villagers and their daily lives.  Nallamma is the forgotten angle in Bangalore’s full-on hurtle towards globalisation. So are the villagers trying to cope with the six-lane road whose official speed limit isf 80 kmph.

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    On a recent Sunday morning, I watched as 32-year old Raju, a resident of Agrahara Layout, vaulted over the metal barricade.  In a sequence worthy of an Apurva Lakhia movie, he then careened across the lanes avoiding the deadly buses, trucks and cars.  He was in a rush to visit a relative, he said, and did not want to waste time walking over a kilometer to the nearest pedestrian crossing. 

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    dwelopment and common manBy: V Ramanathan | 20-Nov-2008 Reply | Forward every city in this India that was Bharath the pedestrian has no voie nor space; this is the real truth. as a journalist i have many times pointed out in Kochi, that PSU insurance companies who put up big banners across roads can instead build atairways for pedestrians to cross the ro0ads and put their adv ertisements therein; it fell on deaf years; how sad. now i am in a village Rengasamudram in tamilnaud where few buses ply; but the lack of trasnsport buses to carry villagers to market is compensated by heavily laden sand lorries flying to neioghbouring kerala: how sad! long back RK Laxsman in one o0f his cartoons declared: 'if this is thecost of development (potholed roads) , then we better do not have developemnt!
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