Let me stick my neck out and go against the grain here.
It is a strongly perpetuated myth that Bombay traffic and drivers obey traffic rules better than most other places in India.
There. I said it. It is a myth. It used to be true, very true. I perpetuated this myself. When I moved to Bombay for the first time in 2002-2003, I witnessed cars stopping at signals close to Opera house, at 2 in the night. I saw traffic cops issuing challans to people, for CUTTING LANES. It was mighty impressive. Never saw that anywhere else, before or since. But, alas, how things have deteriorated for the worst in the last few years.
Traffic signals have become a joke. Most people think of them as being mere guidelines, rather than law. Even when people stop at a traffic signal, do you see where they stop? They keep creeping forward, blocking half the road for traffic going in other direction. NEVER have I seen a queue of vehicles stopping behind the white strips. NEVER.
Oh and the Pedestrians. My god. No wonder Bombay is rated highly in this survey on pedestrian rights. Because they exercise it with impunity. There should be dedicated thread on pedestrian behavior on Bombay roads.
I say the above with some responsibility, having driven in Bombay for close to 5-6 years, before moving to Delhi. Besides the tony SoBo neighborhoods, there is absolutely no discipline observed by anyone on the roads, be it cabbies, private vehicles, two wheelers and PEDESTRIANS. Everyone is always in a mad dash. And we haven't even started discussing the joke called the road infrastructure in Bombay.
Let me illustrate my absolutely subjective views with a couple of examples. (
And please, this is not a Bombay v. Delhi or Bombay v. anything post. So pls refrain from making it one.) Couple of us car-mad colleagues moved from Bombay to Delhi at the same, and shared these views.
1. The road infrastructure in Delhi is so much better, so much better that it automatically induces better driving behavior from people who are inclined to follow discipline. While in Bombay you are assured of driving from one traffic jam to another,
repeatedly, and hence are always in a dash to get in front of the queue, in Delhi you know that the only jams there are, are on the traffic signals. Otherwise the traffic keeps moving. Which automatically relaxes the person, and he/she doesn't drive every second behind the wheel as if it is a race of life. This was one of the first things I noticed in Delhi, as to how folks would drive sedately at 50 kmph on a completely empty stretch of road. I could not fathom why would that person not put pedal to metal when he/she has an empty stretch, like how we do in Bombay. It dawned on me after spending some time on the road. Now I don't do 0-60-0-60 dashes anymore either.
2. Linked to road infrastructure, there are relatively much lesser pedestrians on the road. At least the arterial roads. Comparable to, say, SV Road, Linking road etc. Can you imagine driving on those during peak hours and not constantly looking out for an idiot jumping in from of you. Polar opposite of relaxing drive, no? Well, you know what, you CAN do that in Delhi. Almost take it for granted. Of course there are pedestrians and idiots, who jump across from time to time, but it's not every 20 meters, and you know where they will be. Net result, much more relaxing a drive.
3. SURPRISE SURPRISE. What you didn't expect to hear from anyone about Delhi traffic. Traffic signals are by and large respected. (
p.s. They are called 'red light' in Delhi, not signal ) Most people stop behind the STOP sign. I was super surprised to observe this, but my theory is that Delhi traffic moves that much faster in Bombay that if you jump signals, there is that much more possibility of serious accident. What accident do you expect driving at 20 kmph in Bombay, hehe.
On the opposite end, though, people in Delhi have no idea what lanes mean, and how to take turns on corners. Like seriously. Idiots cut from extreme left to turn right and vice versa all the time. And they don't realize what they are doing. Like it's normal.
Anyway, sorry for the long post. But I had read about bad traffic manners in Bombay even here on team-bhp, so was surprised to see flowering tributes again. Hence, I thought I should my point of view, having closely been part of it for many years. Let me also clarify that my views on both Bombay and Delhi traffic is definitely skewed by the areas of the cities that I generally drove around in. Let me clarify- In Bombay, i drove regularly between Bandra to Lower Parel to Nariman Point stretch. In Delhi, I drive in south and central Delhi by and large. I know East and West Delhi display much worse traffic. And no, Gurgaon and NH-8 is not Delhi.
Just like those who would counter this post, I have no objective data to support my views. It is my personal observation and subject to number of variables. Please feel free to provide your equally subjective, and full of variables, point of views.