Rules Of The Road, Indian Style
Traveling on Indian Roads is an almost hallucinatory potion of sound,
spectacle and experience. It is frequently heart-rending, sometimes
hilarious, mostly exhilarating, always unforgettable -- and, when you
are on the roads, extremely dangerous.
Most Indian road users observe a version of the Highway Code based on
a Sanskrit text. These 12 rules of the Indian road are published for
the first time in English:
- ARTICLE I:
The assumption of immortality is required of all road
users.
- ARTICLE II:
Indian traffic, like Indian society,is structured on a strict caste
system. The following precedence must be accorded at all times. In
descending order, give way to:
- Cows,
- elephants,
- heavy trucks,
- buses,
- official cars,
- camels,
- light trucks,
- buffalo,
- jeeps,
- ox-carts,
- private cars,
- motorcycles,
- scooters,
- auto-rickshaws,
- pigs,
- pedal rickshaws,
- goats,
- bicycles (goods-carrying),
- handcarts,
- bicycles (passenger-carrying),
- dogs,
- pedestrians.
- ARTICLE III:
All wheeled vehicles shall be driven in accordance with the maxim:
to slow is to falter, to brake is to fail, to stop is defeat. This
is the Indian drivers' mantra.
- ARTICLE IV:
Use of horn (also known as the sonic fender or aural amulet):
Cars:
- Short blasts (urgent) indicate supremacy, IE in clearing
dogs, rickshaws and pedestrians from path.
- Long blasts (desperate) denote supplication, IE to oncoming
truck: ``I am going too fast to stop, so unless you slow down we shall
both die". In extreme cases this may be accompanied by flashing of
headlights (frantic).
- Single blast (casual) means: "I have seen someone out of India's
870 million whom I recognise", "There is a bird in the road (which at
this speed could go through my windscreen)" or "I have not blown my
horn for several minutes."
Trucks and buses:
All horn signals have the same meaning, viz: "I have an all-up
weight of approximately 12.5 tons and have no intention of
stopping, even if I could." This signal may be emphasised by
the use of headlamps.
Article IV remains subject to the provision of Order of Precedence
in Article II above.
- ARTICLE V:
All manoeuvres, use of horn and evasive action shall be left until
the last possible moment.
- ARTICLE VI:
In the absence of seat belts (which there is), car occupants shall
wear garlands of marigolds. These should be kept fastened at all
times.
- ARTICLE VII:
- Rights of way: Traffic entering a road from the left has priority.
So has traffic from the right, and also traffic in the middle.
- Lane discipline (VII,1): All Indian traffic at all times and
irrespective of direction of travel shall occupy the centre of the
road.
- ARTICLE VIII:
Roundabouts: India has no roundabouts. Apparent traffic islands in
the middle of crossroads have no traffic management function. Any
other impression should be ignored.
- ARTICLE IX:
Overtaking is mandatory. Every moving vehicle is required to
overtake every other moving vehicle, irrespective of whether it has
just overtaken you.
Overtaking should only be undertaken in
suitable conditions, such as in the face of oncoming traffic, on
blind bends, at junctions and in the middle of villages/city
centres. No more than two inches should be allowed between your
vehicle and the one you are passing -- and one inch in the case of
bicycles or pedestrians.
- ARTICLE X:
Nirvana may be obtained through the head-on crash.
- ARTICLE XI:
Reversing: no longer applicable since no vehicle in India has
reverse gear.
This article was apparently published in the Travel Section of some British newspaper.