6 killed, 3 injured by reckless driving in Karachi day after body set up to analyse traffic accident rise – Pakistan

Authorities on Friday, the police chief, a day after the Karachi Road Accident Anilys Team (Crete), who was formed to analyze the increase in traffic accidents, killed six people and injured three, a day after the formation of the Karachi Road Accident Anlais Team (Crete).

In order to remove the increasing number of traffic accidents in the city, especially heavy vehicles, Karachi Additional Inspector General of Police (AIGP) Javed Alam Odo formed the kaat to analyze their causes and submit a detailed report to the authorities.

Karachi Traffic Police Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Pir Muhammad Shah confirmed Don Dot Com Today, six people lost their lives in traffic accidents in Karachi.

“Bike riding with a passenger, was hit by an unidentified car near the Consulate in Japan early in the morning,” he said.

He added that the vehicle crashed into the sidewalk, causing the couple to fall to the ground. He was taken to Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Center (JPMC), where the passenger was declared dead.

Civil Lines Police Station House Officer (SHO) Khan Mohammad Bhatti said that the identity of the deceased could not be immediately known, while the condition of the bikiniya rider was out of danger.

In another incident, DIG Shah said that a pedestrian was killed in a hit and run incident in Liakatabad last night. Sharifabad police SHO Maher Yousuf identified the deceased as Mohammad Shahid.

The Shu Maher said that Shahid was crossing the road when an unidentified vehicle killed him and killed him.

In the third such incident, a man was riding a motorcycle when an unidentified vehicle hit him on the North Bypass in Manghopore. DIG Shah said a witness told police that a bus was involved in the incident.

Manghopore police SHO Imran Ahmed Khan identified the deceased as Wali Dider.

DIG Traffic said they classified such accidents as they were quick and negligent, adding that Karat had begun analyzing the causes of the accidents.

He said the first incident of the investigation by the body was an accident near Freer Hall, adding that it was a “working process” to determine the causes of deadly accidents.

In addition, Shadri Aslam, of Moripur police, said that a 40 -year -old man, Bashir Ahmed, had hit a trailer on a trailer near Muslim fork on Moripur Road last night while he was carrying a door for a hut in the Suzuki van.

Ahmed died on the spot, while the two drivers managed to escape, left behind the vehicles, which was taken into custody by the police.

In another incident, a 30 -year -old man was killed, while another person was seriously injured when a trailer collided with his motorcycle near Qayyamabad Bridge last night.

The spokesman added, “The body and the injured were shifted to the JPMC, where their identity was not immediately known.”

Separately, two people were seriously injured in an accident near Nasir Kodi in Korangi in Korangi yesterday evening.

He was taken to the JPMC, where one of them was identified as 18 -year -old Emmanuel Shahbaz, who was injured this afternoon during treatment.

The rules of the ban on the movement of heavy vehicles were recently enforced between the increasing traffic accidents of dumpers and tankers in Metropolis and the protests of civilian deaths.

Last month, the provincial government banned the entry of heavy vehicles into the city during the day, which allows them to work only from 11am to 6pm.

The Sindh government has also made it mandatory for all heavy vehicles in Karachi to have a physical fitness certificate among the increasing number of traffic accidents contained in dumper trucks.

Rights workers and civil society members have said that the increasing number of deadly road accidents in the city and the poor condition of traffic law enforcement agencies are a violation of human rights, which the state has failed to protect.

Provincial lawmakers belonging to the Muthaida National Movement Pakistan have also criticized the traffic police for “failure” to control heavy vehicles claiming more than 80 lives in January.

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