- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Blaze of Glory: Drunken Indian Man Sets Bike Afire over Steep Traffic Penalty

© Photo : Manohar Kesari/twitter A man allegedly set his bike on fire in Sheikh Sarai ,Delhi after police issued challan for violating traffic rules
 A man allegedly set his bike on fire in Sheikh Sarai ,Delhi after police issued challan for violating traffic rules - Sputnik International
Subscribe
New Delhi (Sputnik): A disgruntled rider set his motorcycle ablaze after police in India’s national capital, Delhi asked him to pay a $153 (11,000 Rupee) fine on Thursday after he was stopped for violating the country’s mandatory helmet law.

Enforcing new MVC regulations, traffic policemen randomly stopped the motorcyclist identified as Rakesh after they saw him riding without a mandatory helmet.

They asked him to take a breathalyser test and found that he was intoxicated. He registered as having a 0.20 percent (g/dL) blood alcohol content. The permissible limit is .03 percent.

Staring at the possibility of his motorcycle being impounded, Rakesh decided instead to set it on fire, prompting the police to arrest him. Later a case was registered against him, they added.

The incident went viral on social media, with netizens taking screenshots and joking about the incident.

 

​One poetic Twitter user was even inspired to describe the incident in verse.

​Rakesh claimed he had bought the bike for $209 and felt that a fine of $153 for not wearing a helmet and being drunk while driving was too steep.

According to the police, Rakesh was agreeable initially to having his vehicle impounded, but when informed about the new MVC laws, he became agitated and set it on fire to prevent it from being impounded.

Under the new rules, penalties have increased by up to ten times for some common traffic violations, like driving without a license and driving with a revoked license.

Since the introduction of the amended Motor Vehicles Act on 1 September, several Indian states have aggressively begun levying the fines for various traffic violations. One such incident involved an auto-rickshaw driver in the Indian state of Odisha. He was fined 47,500 Rupees (About $ 662) for flouting traffic rules.

In another incident, a resident of Delhi was fined 23,000 Rupees (about $321) by police in the Indian state of Haryana for a similar offence.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала