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In one recent incident, a motorist at a crowded toll booth pulled out a gun and threatened to shoot the toll collector if he served another driver who had cut in line, local papers reported. Driving on Delhi's roads is a hazardous exercise at best. Cars and buses graze fenders with farm tractors, motorbikes and the occasional ox-driven cart. At red lights, scooters zigzag between cars trying to get to the front. Small cars ignore lane lines and wedge themselves into any free space. Pedestrians, beggars and hawkers weave around the vehicles. It's a honking, rugby-like scrum that revs up to a slow crawl when the light turns green. Shalu Singh, an accountant who drives to work in Delhi, said it makes her angry to see drivers breaking the rules and getting away with it. "You have people talking on their mobile phones while driving or jumping traffic lights or tailgating you to make you drive faster," she said. "The police are mute spectators," she added. "They feel if they stop a driver who is breaking the rules, they will hold up traffic and make the situation worse. So the offender gets away scot-free." Maxwell Pereira, a retired police officer, said there is only so much the police can do. "It's high time vehicle drivers learn to be civilized and follow road rules," he said. As the situation on the roads deteriorates, he worries that even normally levelheaded drivers will resort to road rage. "There's no saying whom it will strike next," he said. "Even the most sober and most calm person will lose his cool."
[Associated
Press;
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