Pavements that fail people


Dicing with danger: A woman walking past a cow on a pedestrian footpath in Bengaluru. — AFP

In this country, a pavement can be many things – a hawking site, parking area and garbage dumping space – but rarely what it is meant to be: a safe path to walk.

Across the country, pedestrians are routinely forced to walk on busy roads, despite a recent ruling by the Supreme Court that said citizens have a “fundamental right” to safety on footpaths.

The ruling in June stemmed from the death of a five-year-old child who was run over by a tanker while walking to school on a road that, the court noted, had neither a footpath nor a pedestrian crossing.

“If the road exists, there is a duty to ensure there are demarcated and well-maintained footpaths for walkers,” the court said.

For writer Patralekha Chatter-jee, a routine walk to the neighbourhood market in the capital New Delhi is fraught with hazards.

The mile-long route is obstructed by parked vehicles, potholes and rubbish, leaving pedestrians little choice but to step into traffic.

“There are cars coming at you from everywhere,” Chatterjee said.

More than 2,000km away in the tech hub of Bengaluru, 21-year-old resident Srinivas Angadi faces similar challenges.

“Footpaths are encroached upon by street vendors and shop extensions, forcing pedestrians onto the road,” he said.

A Supreme Court-appointed committee found in 2024 that 84% of footpaths failed to meet basic engineering standards, and only one in four was usable.

The stakes are high in a country with one of the world’s deadliest road networks.

More than 30,000 pedestrians are killed on Indian roads every year, according to official data, accounting for around 11% of global road fatalities – even though India has only about 1% of the world’s vehicles. Campaigners say the problem is not a lack of legislation but a chronic failure to enforce existing rules.

Rishi Aggarwal, founder of Mumbai-based advocacy group The Walking Project, argues that many pavement conflicts could be avoided if city planners formally incorporated street vendors into urban design instead of treating them as an afterthought.

He suggested reserving designated spaces for vendors within commercial complexes, providing shelter from extreme weather as well as access to clean toilets.

He also alleged that a thriving informal economy around street vending and public space occupation has reduced incentives for authorities to resolve the problem.

“The hawker issue is not a policing issue. It is fundamentally a planning and governance issue,” he said. — AFP

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