By Nilanjana Sarkar
A ruinous collision involving seven motorcars and three buses left four dead and 25 injured when the vehicles erupted in flames on Mathura’s Yamuna Motorway in the predawn hours of Tuesday. The malefactor was a mask of thick fog that shrank visibility to nearly nothing at the 127 km mark.
At around 4:30 am, the chaos unfolded. “Low visibility led to the smash, and fire gulfed everything, ” explained Shlok Kumar, elderly supervisor of Police, Mathura. Panicked passengers climbed out as holocausts trapped them. “I was asleep the coming thing I knew, dears were far and wide, ” a shaken viewer said.
Swift exigency response demurred in. A line of eleven fire exchanges fought the blaze while deliverance crews laboured to free those trapped. “ We’ve verified four losses and 25 injured, fortunately none critical, ” said Suresh Chandra Rawat, SP Mathura Rural.
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath expressed profound anguish publicising aid; he said, “ ₹ 2 lakh will support the deprived families, and ₹ 50,000 goes to the wounded. My thoughts are with the departed, and I pray for a swift recovery of the injured. Drive prudently in this deadly haze. ”
The crash underscores a grim pattern of downtime fog across northern India that has turned roads into deathtraps, claiming lives through multiple accidents. Authorities now urgently push for stricter safeguards, enforced speed limits and fog-alert technology to help reprises of similar holocaust.
With the Yamuna Motorway cleared and business diverted, examinations are underway. The tragedy is a haunting memorial on fog- shrouded roadways, alert is n’t voluntary.
A bitter echo of fog’s murderous grip on northern India’s roads, where clusters of crashes have taken lives. The authorities now spotlight critical requirements, execute speed caps and smart fog detectors to forestall reprises of this horror. The critical Delhi- Agra roadway was restartedpost-crisis, business rerouted. Examinations are on, but a harsh fog of verity demands respect, and roads demand alertness.
