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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

DMRC books over 1,600 people for creating nuisance, including making reels on metro premises

Creating nuisance may also include offences such as sitting on the floor of the train and eating inside the train, among others

PTI New Delhi Published 25.07.24, 02:41 PM
Representational image

Representational image File picture

The DMRC booked more than 1,600 people for creating nuisance, including making reels, on the metro premises during April to June, a rise of three per cent from the corresponding year-ago period, officials said on Thursday.

A senior Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) official said the separate calculation for passengers penalised only for making reels, however, was not available.

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Creating nuisance may also include offences such as sitting on the floor of the train and eating inside the train, among others.

According to the data, 1,647 penalties were issued for creating nuisance under Section 59 of the Metro Railways (Operations and Maintenance) Act.

The corresponding number for the same period last year was 1,600.

The DMRC issued 610, 518 and 519 penalties in April, May and June, respectively.

The corresponding numbers for the previous year were 528, 485 and 587, the data showed.

DMRC Managing Director Vikas Kumar told PTI that they penalised people for creating nuisance in the metro area.

"We use our machinery so that such kind of incidents should not happen on the metro premises. We have a provision of penalising if someone creates nuisance on the metro premises and we do penalise them. It is an ongoing process and the more you keep doing it, the more people will get discouraged," he said.

"But the issue is that we do not have enough manpower to check every corner. If we have 67 lakh passengers a day, then monitoring such a huge number of people is not easy. We have CCTV surveillance through which we get to know if anything happened on the premises," he added.

The DMRC has also put up posters at several metro stations, dissuading passengers from making reels and causing discomfort.

In April, the DMRC asked the Delhi Police to conduct a thorough investigation after a video emerged online of two women applying colours on each other inside a train.

The video, which surfaced ahead of Holi, drew criticism from a large section of commuters.

The DMRC had said at the time that it was running various campaigns, both online and offline, to discourage passengers from indulging in any activity that might cause inconvenience to fellow commuters.

Mobile checking squads are also deployed at times to check activities considered inappropriate.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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