From New Delhi, Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan delivered an emotional Saturday address, passionately advocating for bystanders to become rescuers in road accidents. He warned against the peril of mobile videography over vital aid, insisting that quick hospital transfers can avert fatalities.
Chouhan opened with his own roadside intervention: while heading from Bhopal to Gwalior, he encountered a crowd ignoring a collapsed youth. Undeterred, he rushed the man to a facility and arranged expert treatment, exemplifying decisive action.
Nationwide data reveals over 150,000 road deaths yearly, with the ‘golden hour’ holding the key to 50 percent survival improvement, according to specialists.
He evoked profound imagery: preventing maternal desolation, paternal voids for kids, fraternal despair. ‘Life-saving aid is piety incarnate; selfless service, our ethos,’ proclaimed Chouhan.
Tackling reluctance rooted in legal fears, he highlighted supportive government measures that honor samaritans. This resonant plea positions everyday citizens as heroes, urging a cultural pivot towards proactive humanity amid escalating traffic tragedies.
