Monday, December 30, 2024

Thinkers in quest for a way through gridlock

It was really fascinating to watch in Ekushey TV news on Friday and Saturday nights (August 27 & 28) in two consecutive episodes a taxi driver named Mohammad Ali analysing to a BUET teacher a marvelous solution he derived from his 5-year long research based on his hands-on experiences to ease the notorious gridlock of Dhaka traffic system. Mohammad Ali studied up to Class V in a school and he has been scratching a living as a cab driver for a long time.
Every job has its difficulties and frustrations; but Mohammad Ali’s frustrations due to loss of earnings caused by everyday traffic gridlocks in almost every main road in the city were simply unbearable. Mohammad Ali often thumped his steering wheel in sheer frustrations as of late he had to wait for hours in the midst of traffic jams in the city. At the end of the day his earnings as a consequence of slow motion of his taxi was too meager to make ends meet.
An expert on transportation Dr. Shamsul Haque, who is a teacher of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), was flabbergasted by Mohammad Ali’s elaborate and detailed mappings of all the roads of Dhaka city and his ingenious loop-based detouring arrangements he suggested with clear graphics and diagrams to avoid traffic jams, especially those cataclysmic jams at the crossroads during rush hour traffic.
Surprisingly, as Dr. Haque was narrating as a guest speaker in the Ekushey TV newsroom, there was a queer similarity between the plans Mohammad Ali had drawn and the patterns of vehicular movements in the modern roads in countries like Australia and Thailand, though Mohammad Ali has never seen any other city in the world except the city of Dhaka. “Mohammad Ali is a gifted thinker indeed”, said Dr. Shamsul Haque.
With people getting richer and the urban lifestyle changing very rapidly residents at Dhaka city are stamping their feet in frustrated rage as there seems to be no relief in the offing from the horrendous traffic gridlocks that are paralysing people’s movement with vehicles spending on an average seven and a half hours everyday in traffic jams from 8.00 am until 8.00 pm.
According to a study, the annual economic loss from the gridlock on Dhaka’s four key roads alone amounted to Tk 96 billion—a staggering amount that equals one-third of the country’s annual development expenditure.
There are manifold reasons behind such traffic problems in Dhaka city. One of the main reasons is ‘too many cars for too few roads’. According to the Bangladesh Road Transport Authority, in 2008 nearly 20,000 new vehicles hit the streets of Dhaka, which has grown from a population of 200,000 in 1974 to about 13 million today.
There are many families living in the city who are maintaining four cars: one for the master for his office work, the second one for the madam for her socialization, the third one for children for their commuting between home and school and the fourth one for the servants for their moving around to buy a pack of cigarettes for the master or to carry clothes to the laundry shops. After all, running errands in cars burning CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) fuel is way cheaper than in rickshaws that nowadays are hiking exorbitant fares to compensate their losses due to traffic congestions. Many of these families having more than one car in their private transport pool belong to a new breed whose wallets have suddenly been fattened by bribes and black money.
Of late, executives working in different public enterprises and state-owned banks have been granted interest-free car loans with monthly maintenance allowances ranging from Tk 25,000 to Tk 40,000. Hundreds of such lucky and happy bureaucrats and bankers have bought a great number of cars in the recent months causing a sudden surge in demand and supply of reconditioned cars and adding fuel to flames of traffic congestions.
It is reported that the Chittagong port has been awash with thousands of reconditioned cars imported mostly from Japan. According to some estimate, everyday about 50 cars are hitting the city roads in Bangladesh; but I guess many times more than that figure are joining the caravan of new cars hitting streets to choke up the already congested roads.
Some believe not less than 500 families are relocating from rural areas and district towns to Dhaka city everyday to settle permanently in their newly purchased apartments or homes in the capital. The first thing these new settlers do contemplate about is a car that can run on CNG.
Traffic seizures in cities and towns in Bangladesh have been a commonplace and we have to learn to live with it. Ridding Bangladesh of traffic congestions may not come soon enough for people who are increasingly getting used to a lot of luxuries and creature comforts.
But, taxi driver Mohammad Ali thinks otherwise. To his viewpoint, the present defective traffic system, not the ever increasing vehicles hitting the roads, is responsible for our traffic plights. He thinks traffic gridlocks are mainly created by traffic signals and the vehicles crowding the intersections. “The first thing to be done is ban ‘Taking right turn’ in all the main roads”, Mr. Ali suggested during his appearance in Ekushey TV news. Mohammad Ali is confident that traffic paralysis in the city would disappear within three months if his plans are followed. Dr. Haque also endorsed Mohammad Ali’s conviction pinpointing how by introducing U-loops at 70 junctions of the city roads equipped with close circuit cameras and by erecting long dividers on points where the traffic is mostly snarled up the abnormal traffic congestions can be dispelled at almost no cost and without any physical presence of police personnel to coordinate the traffic movements.
We are not alone in facing gridlocks in our roads and highways. No matter how modern or scientific is their traffic system many transport authorities in many developed countries are also sweating buckets in grappling with their traffic deadlocks.
Last week, a traffic jam stretching more than 60 miles in China entered its ninth day with no end in sight. Cars and trucks had been slowed to a crawl since August 14 on the National Expressway 110, the major route from Beijing to Zhangjiakou. Officials expect the congestion to continue until workers complete construction projects along the road on September 13. Chinese state media reported that the drivers are gradually becoming accustomed to the severe delays.
Three decades of unprecedented economic growth transformed China from a nation of bicycle-users into the world’s largest car market, overtaking the United States for that honor last year. The number of vehicles sold last year in China has risen to 13.6 million, a dramatic rise of 45 percent since 2008.
Commuters in Beijing are dependent on nine subway lines and hundreds of bus-only lanes, but an increasing number of the city’s 17 million population are using cars. Traffic snarls in Beijing nowadays lasts as long as five hours on average and there is little chance of an immediate relief from traffic annoyance with a continuous rise in car-ownership of people enjoying hefty rises in their earnings that are being spurred by their country’s 10%-plus annual economic growth.
Frustrations at times mother inventions. Like Mohammad Ali, the taxi driver from Bangladesh, one Song Youzhou, an entrepreneur from China, has also sweated days and nights in quest for a solution of the traffic gridlock in his country. Song Youzhou is attracting worldwide interest in his futuristic answer to city gridlocks: a 43-meter long ‘straddling bus on stilts’, with an elevated passenger section having a capacity for about 1,200 passengers, allowing it to pass over vehicles stuck in the road below—a cheaper, greener and faster alternative mode of transport for commuters to leapfrog the horrendous traffic jams that increasingly are bringing many cities in China to a grinding halt.
The world would have been a darker place to live in if people like Mohammad Ali, the taxi driver, and Song Youzhou, the entrepreneur, did not spend their days and nights always thinking to invent devices to serve the mankind. And one does not have to be a scientist to be an inventor.
Albert Einstein was not a genius when he began his schooling; but a scientist was born inside him perhaps on the day when his imagination was sparked with a sense of wonder at a compass his father presented him when he was only six years old.
In 1921, a 14-year old boy Philo T. Farnsworth, as he was breaking up soil with his uncle’s horse-drawn harrow, gazed at the plowed rows of dirt behind him, when a vision of excited electrons danced in his mind, a magic moment when one of the century’s greatest inventions—Television—was conceived in his mind. Farnsworth did not complete college.
Albert Einstein and Philo T. Farnsworth were not serious students adorned with a number of academic degrees. But, they were the visionaries; they were the thinkers. They are definitely the rare people still towering above the vast sea of humanity, upon whose shoulders we are viewing the world of wonders of science. Perhaps that is why Albert Einstein once said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”

 

Courtesy of The Financial Express

Related News

Bangladesh named The Economist’s country of the year

News Desk : dhakamirror.com The Economist, an influential British weekly magazine, has named Bangladesh the ‘Country of the Year’ for 2024, recognising the nation’s incredible political and social transformation. ‘The winner toppled a tyrant and seems headed for something better,’ the magazine said in its report published on Thursday. It said that the recognition was ... Read more

HC declares key provisions of 15th amendment partially unconstitutional

News Desk : dhakamirror.com The High Court on Tuesday declared several provisions of the Constitution, introduced through the contentious 15th amendment, partially unconstitutional, reinforcing the foundational principles of democracy, judicial independence, and the Constitution’s basic structure. The bench comprising Justice Farah Mahbub and Justice Debasish Roy Chowdhury delivered the verdict, addressing amendments that abolished the ... Read more

BIDS study shows 28.24% of graduates from National University unemployed

News Desk : dhakamirror.com A recent study conducted by the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies reveals that 28.24% of graduates from colleges affiliated with the National University remain unemployed. Moreover, a majority of the ones who secure employment are primarily engaged in low-paying jobs, the study further revealed. The study titled, “Understanding unemployment among college ... Read more

Begum Rokeya Day observed with call for women’s equality

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Begum Rokeya Day was observed on Monday across the country with a call for ensuring equality of women in every sector. The country marks December 9 as Begum Rokeya Day commemorating birth and death anniversaries of Begum Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain on the same day. Begum Rokeya, considered as a pioneer of ... Read more

Saudi mega projects push demand for Bangladeshi workers as other markets shrink

Kamran Siddiqui Saudi Arabia hired 83,733 Bangladeshi workers last month, marking the highest number of overseas employment in a single country in 35 months, driven by ongoing mega projects which indicate a further boost in demand for Bangladeshi labour. While overseas employment in Saudi Arabia is surging, the demand for Bangladeshi workers in other labour ... Read more

Bangladesh’s civic space broadened: report

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Civic space condition improved in Bangladesh due to steps taken by the interim government, said the People Power Under Attack 2024 report. The CIVICUS Monitor, a research consortium led by global civil society alliance CIVICUS that track civic space, unveiled the new report on Wednesday, said a press release. Bangladesh stayed ... Read more

Drastic fall in Bangladesh-India flights amid visa restrictions

Tanzil Rahaman The number of flights on different routes between Bangladesh and India has drastically fallen amid passenger shortages as the Indian government had imposed visa restrictions. The flights of Biman Bangladesh Airlines and US Bangla Airlines have halved after the fall of Sheikh Hasina government on August 5 amid a student-led mass uprising, according ... Read more

Bangladesh committed to sweeping labour reforms: Yunus tells US delegation

News Desk : dhakamirror.com The interim government is committed to carrying out sweeping labour reforms in an effort to attract more foreign buyers to the country, Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus told a visiting delegation from the United States. The chief adviser made the comments at his office in Dhaka’s Tejgaon when a United States ... Read more

Health ministry prohibits drug company reps from entering hospitals

News Desk : dhakamirror.com In order to improve hospital services and make sure appropriate treatment for those hurt during the Anti-Discrimination Student Movement, the Ministry of Health has issued 10 directives. One of these directives prohibits representatives of pharmaceutical companies from entering hospitals. A directive signed by the deputy secretary of the Health Service Department, ... Read more

Over 20 injured in clash between Polytechnic, Butex students

News Desk : dhakamirror.com A clash occurred on Sunday evening in Tejgaon in the capital city of Dhaka, resulting in injuries to around 20 to 25 people. The incident involved students from the Bangladesh University of Textiles and Dhaka Polytechnic Institute. The clash broke out at about 9:00pm on Sunday at Aziz Hall of BUTEX ... Read more

Ex-chief justice Ruhul Amin dies

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Former Chief Justice Ruhul Amin died early Sunday morning at the age of 83 due to health issues related to aging. The chief justice’s office said in a condolence message that his passing occurred around 4:30 am while he was receiving treatment at the Combined Military Hospital in Dhaka. Namaz-e janaza ... Read more

Well-marked low over Bay may intensify further

News Desk : dhakamirror.com The Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD) reported that a well-marked low-pressure area over the southeast Bay of Bengal and nearby Equatorial Indian Ocean is still present. This weather system is likely to strengthen further, according to BMD’s morning update. The bulletin indicates that the weather will likely be dry with some clouds ... Read more

Dhaka – Benapole train service, passing over Padma Bridge to start on December 2

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Train services on the Dhaka-Benapole route via the Padma Bridge will start on December 2. Padma Rail Link Project Director Md Afzal Hossain said it on Thursday (November 22). He said, “We are hopeful about the official start of passenger train services on the Dhaka-Benapole section via the Padma Bridge from ... Read more

475 killed in road crashes across Bangladesh in October: report

News Desk : dhakamirror.com At least 475 people were killed and 815 others were injured in 452 road crashes across Bangladesh in October, said a report published by the Passenger Welfare Association of Bangladesh on Saturday. During the time, 34.31 per cent or 163 people were killed and 29.32 per cent or 239 more were ... Read more

Three IUT students lost lives as picnic bus becomes electrified

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Three students of the Islamic University of Technology (IUT) died by electrocution and around 60 were left injured after a bus taking them to a picnic came into contact with an overhead bare electric wire in Gazipur’s Sreepur today (23 November) at 10:30am. The deceased are – Mozammel Hossain Naim, 24, ... Read more

Khaleda joins Armed Forces Day event after 12 years

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Bangladesh Nationalist Party chairperson and former prime minister Khaleda Zia on Thursday attended the Armed Forces Day reception programme at Senakunja after 12 years. Chief adviser to the interim government Muhammad Yunus exchanged greetings with Khaleda Zia at the reception programme at Dhaka Cantonment. Khaleda last attended the Armed Forces Day ... Read more

AMM Nasir Uddin made CEC

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Former secretary AMM Nasir Uddin has been appointed as the new chief election commissioner. President Muhammed Shahabuddin appointed him and other election commissioners on Thursday, a day after the EC search committee submitted the shortlist containing 10 names for those posts. Other members of the commission are former additional secretary Md ... Read more

JU student lost life after being hit by battery-run rickshaw on campus

News Desk : dhakamirror.com A first-year student of Jahangirnagar University died after she was hit by a battery-powered rickshaw on campus yesterday evening. Afsana Karim was a student of marketing and a resident of Begum Khaleda Zia Hall. Her parents live in Sherpur. In security camera footage, Afsana was seen walking near the arts building ... Read more

Education must foster creativity : Professor Yunus

News Desk : dhakamirror.com Chief Adviser Dr Muhammad Yunus said on Wednesday (20 November) that Bangladesh’s education system must foster creativity to create a generation of entrepreneurs. “We should reform the education system in a way that it creates a generation of entrepreneurs. We need education, which helps students become creative people. Our young people ... Read more

World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims observed

News Desk : dhakamirror.com World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims was observed in Bangladesh on Sunday as elsewhere in the world. To mark the day, different government and non-government organisations held different programmes on the day. The day is commemorated on the third Sunday of November each year. Dhaka North City Corporation on ... Read more