Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Return of the itch to ride again



Oops!

It's tough to control. Am talking about my itch to hitch a ride on trucks/trailers.

"Didn't you complete 10,000 Km recently?" asked my 20 plus daughter when she heard me discussing the route plan with Mercurio Pallia Logistics bossman Vipul Nanda a week ago over phone.

"So, what?... That's was long ago," I blurted.

"Long ago? You returned home mid June and went into writing your book subsequently. And just 10 days ago, you got your maiden book 10,000 Km On Indian Highways published. What's the hurry?" Well, she was hammering at me as if I am about to commit a crime.

Poor girl, she does not understand the thrill of being on the highways. Not in CRVs. Or Volvo airconditioned buses, but in ordinary heavy commercial vehicles ferrying goods facilitating trade and commerce.

"What's your plan?" asked Nanda, the portly fortyish chairman and managing director of Mercuiro Pallia Logistics, on whose car carriers I had traversed approx. 4,000 Km of my previous trip.

"Now that you have recently opened a new branch office in Guwahati, how about a trip to the north east?" I responded.

Guwahati, according to http://www.liveindia.com/distance/Delhi.html is approx. 2,000 km. Close to Bhutan on the northwest, Bangladesh to the southwest and Myanmar in the east. Almost close to China. Wow!

The distance of 2,000 km is nothing great. Shorter than the Chennai-Gurgaon trip (2800 km) I did November 2010 and longer than Jamshedpur-Ludhiana (1,650 km) trip I undertook February this year.

Cool. I will be crossing at least five states: Delhi (National Capital Region), Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Sikkim and then Asom or Assam. Will I touch West Bengal? Not sure at this moment.

Though I had been to Jamshedpur in the east and Kolkota, the state capital of West Bengal couple of years ago, seldom did I venture into the north east.

North east has been on my radar for quite some time. A few months ago, Mr Arun Rawat, a senior government official at the Cabinet Secretariat, casually mentioned that north east transport scenario also needs attention. This came in the form of a letter to my transport guru and mentor Mr Chittaranjan Dass, director of SAARC Centre for Transport Studies and Editor of SAARC Journal of Transport, with whom I am associated with currently.

Mr Rawat, incidentally, belongs to the Sikkim cadre and held the transport portfolio in the federal government couple of years ago. Sikkim is clubbed along with the Seven Sisters of India:the north eastern states of Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Manipur, Tripura, Assam and Nagaland.

Good friend Sanjeev Tripathi, Chief Operating Officer, Mercurio Pallia Logistics, has already set the ball rolling by issuing orders to arrange for my Delhi-Guwahati trip as part of the first leg either from Rudrapur or Noida - wherefrom his car carriers will originate for their north eastern state sojourn."Look for a comfortable vehicle and a good driver," is his instruction. So sweet of him. Thanks, Sanjeev!

What about the weather? Have you checked? demanded my spouse.

I said, I will. Well, I am yet to.

(To be continued)

Thursday, 16 June 2011

"Wall Poster'-ity



I don’t know about you, but I love wall posters. In fact, I grew up loving them from the deep of my heart. Environment has a lot to do with this fascination. It was late 1960s and early 1970s before I packed up and left “Singara Chennai” (Beautiful Chennai) in search of bread and butter. My neighbor was a wall poster contractor: Kanakasabai. He had a crew that handled film and political posters. Remember, am talking about the Kollywood and the tinsel town that sent a matinee idol – late M G Ramachandran – to sit in the hot seat of Fort St. George to determine the fate of millions of Tamils in the state of Tamilnadu. Also remember it is the state that built a temple – yes, a temple - for Bollywood reject, but Kollywood hottie Khushboo.

Posters meant giant ones. Empty walls were a rarity because everything used to be plastered with posters: either about the newly released Tamil flick, or a Tamil drama (TV was more than a decade away!) to be staged at the local sabha (halls) or a political meeting or a religious discourse (kathakalakshebham) by eminent scholars at Venus Colony mostly. Or Tirupathi temple’s Celestial Umbrella passing through the Chennai which when happens used to draw a lot of conservative Tamil women mostly to pray and offer money into the hundi. All these need to be told to the potential audience well in audience. Well, that’s where posters used to play a crucial role. That’s what Kanasaby did for a living mostly.

Another reason for my poster fixation was honestly that is where I practiced my English learning. I used to translate Tamil movie names into English equivalent. For instance, “Eastbound Train” for the Bharati Raja blockbuster “Kizhakke Pogum Rail” (this was made in Hindi with Sunny Deol in “Saware Wali Gaddi” later); “Wealth or Family?” for “Panama Paasama?” – another Love king late Gemini Ganesan (Bollywood thespian Rekha’s father). “Truth will Triumph” for “Dharmam Thalai Kakkum”, an MGR flick. Well, the list is endless.

Besides the posters, I used to cherish the aroma of the paste itself. Cooked in hot tins on a kerbside brick-stacked impromptu ovens with dry wood as fuel. The poster boys (not the ones featured, but those who paste the posters on walls across the city) – mostly post midnight and before dawn. These lean boys, with stacks of posters bundled and kept in the rear seat holder and a tin of gluey paste hung on the handle bar, used to cycle round the neighbourhood – say a radius of 10 km maximum – plastering empty walls with their merchandise. My wonderment used to about the way they wear their long shorts and over and above them a tucked in multi-coloured lungi revealing their shorts. It is a solo act because between midnight and daybreak they have to complete their “assignment” and return home. But as they leave on their mission, their bonhomie is seen to be believed.

As I cycle around the next morning, I used to see the posters these chaps have carried out and make a mental connect with them. On occasions, buffalos or cows would eat up the posters, attracted by the wet paste. Well, there were also occasions when political posters would display a handful of cowdung on the face of the personality – as a mark of disrespect or cunningness attempted his rivals. This used to happen to leading male matinee idols posters as well: MGR fans would disfigure Sivaji Ganesan’s posters and vice versa. Or at times, just the face would be torn off giving a ghastly feel.

Passing through Mangalore and watching film posters and hoardings adorning the walls pushed me back to the jolly 1960s. Though I cannot read any of these posters, I still could relate to them. Any day, I would vote for these paper posters over neon signs atop buildings. They serve a purpose: to propagate an idea or promote a film or personality. Besides a whole lot of job opportunity for the unskilled and or uneducated brethren. If the walls get disfigured in the process, so be it. Maybe someone is trying to translate the Kannada film titles like I did four or five decades ago. Thank God, this form of propagation has not died!

Tailpiece

The wall poster culture has gone to the masses in the neighbouring Tamilnadu, it seems. Saw this poster at Namakkal recently. The gent shown in this wall poster has died a year ago and his friends are observing his first death anniversary. On enquiry with the local populace, learnt that he is an ordinary folk – not a politico.

On The Road, Once Again



Nothing excites me more than being on the Indian highways. For the third time over the past six months, I decided to hit the highways: from Delhi to Chennai. For a change, I decided to hop onto carriers hauling various items. If the November 2010 Chennai-Delhi trip was on an automotive carrier (Mercurio Pallia carrying Hyundai cars) and February 2011 Jamshedpur-Ludhiana journey was on a steel carrier (Credence Logistics hauling Tata Steel wire rods), this time I escorted – is that the right word! – Tata Ace LCVs (Delhi-Halol), Concrete pipes (Anand-Bombay), Mahindra Tractors (Bombay-Bangalore), plastic granules (Bangalore-Mangalore), Masala packaging material (Mangalore-Coimbatore) and assorted items (Namakkal to Chennai). Over 5,000 kilometres in the searing May heat spread over 23 days.

For a change, this time the interaction en route with various stakeholders: drivers community, transport agents, fleet owners, transport commissioners, director general of police and a memorable visit to Namakkal, the transport city of India. Last, but not the least was the visit the 25 acre Ashok Leyland Driver Training Institute and the upcoming Namakkal Transport College next door and interaction with brain behind these two outfits: one, already established player and another one – one man’s mission to pay back to the industry as a token of his gratitude to the transport industry that helped him etch a name.

I am definitely wiser after this trip. What did I learn this time? Primarily, the transport sector is a split group with the malady of groupism rampant and eating into achieving greater heights. Many organisations that claim to be representing the stakeholders’ interests are not truly run on professional lines. There is very little consensus on issues of general interest to the entire fraternity. Most office bearers of various outfits – without getting into names – are keen of beefing up their own personal empire.

Karnataka emerges as the most corrupt Road Transport Authority regime in the entire country. Perhaps Karnataka RTOs are in a mad race with their counterparts from Uttar Pradesh. Not a worthy race. I was wrong to assume that women RTOs were in a different league: more honest and law abiding. This assumption was proved wrong during my sojourn through Bangalore-Mangalore highway. Sad, but it is a reality. Meeting with Transport Commissioner Sham Bhatt of Karnataka and Director General & Inspector General of Police Dr S T Ramesh in Bangalore showed that they are helpless for a variety of reasons. Submission of written complaint and regular SMSes to both of them of what I was going through at every single RTO interaction, I know, was like a trying to kill the Frankenstein with a sling and arrow.

The visit to Devaraj Urs Truck Terminal, managed by the Karnataka State Government, taught me one thing: how not to run an essential utility like this. The concept was great, but implementation wass pathetic. The Yashwantpur facility is an ideal location, but badly managed. The huge sprawling facility could have been turned into a decent Transport Nagar and run on more profitable lines because Bangalore a critical point for both north and south bound heavy commercial vehicles.

One redeeming factor was what constant vigilance can bring about. Praveen Shetty, Chairman of Road Safety Committee of Kanara Chamber of Commerce & Industry, has mounted a major onslaught against National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) over the poor construction of New Mangalore Port Approach Road (37 km stretch).


(Photo: Praveen Shetty with his youngest daughter Aasthana at breakfast table in Mangalore)

Under the Shetty-mounted offensive, NHAI is carrying out corrective measures under the supervision of Sai Consultants which in turn is supervising Ircon’s actual work on the ground. Things are changing for the better in Mangalore. Maybe not at the pace at which Shetty wants this to be done. Praveen, carry on the good work!

A word about NHAI. Notwithstanding the carping criticism from all and sundry, NHAI project directors are faced with a plethora of challenges: The top three spoilers are viz., land acquisition, shifting of utility from the proposed carriageway and last but not the least is the feeling of trees. Local politicians play a big role. It was not unusual to hear about complaints that the District Commissioners or District Collectors simply refuse to listen to the Chief Secretary of the State on highway expansion issues! Development does not come easily. There has to be some sacrifices on all sides.

One last thing. A majority of drivers and fleet owners unhesitatingly say that they are not averse to paying toll taxes to the authorities because they concede that toll roads have made a positive contribution to their fleet movement. Yes, they do complain of periodic hikes at various poll booths. Some mechanism has to be set in motion. But their major concern is the looting and extortion unleashed by the authorities in the form of RTOs, checkpost officials and commercial tax bureaucrats. Tackling or taming these unscrupulous elements who are acting against the interests of the states in which they operate ought to be a priority. Therefore, a prayer to AIMTC: fight corruption on highways which is going unchecked. One day it will devour the economy. Toll charges can be settled amicably by sitting across the table. That is to say, focus on genuine, not fake, issues.

NOTE: This piece appeared in June 2011 issue of SAARC Journal of Transport

Monday, 16 May 2011

ROADTRIP: Some Images

Over the past 12 days, while on the national highways, a few images stuck to my retina. Could not forget them. Here they are.



This hill, I am 100 per cent sure won't remain ten years down the line. It is already been earmarked as "Zawar Mines". It is waiting to be uprooted - literally. This reminded me of the quite disappearance of several hills dotting the city landscape of Muscat. As part of development, many vanished. Many more will go kaput soon in Muscat as well.

Is this a price we have to pay?

Will we reach a stage when our great grandchildren will have to be shown mountains on photos?

***



I always salute the Gujarati enterprise. This is a set of women who "man" - nay, "woman" the kitchen at Rinku Commercial Carriers at Anand, Gujarat. Everyone from the top brass eat their lunch cooked in this kitchen.

While these women roll their pins, flip rotis on gas stove and dice vegetables and cook rice and boil lentils, their children play on the ground below.

The idea is to serve fresh food to all in this campus. Including the security guards.
Nothing revolutionary no doubt, but the concern for others is what appeals to me.

***



Though windmills are part of Karnataka landscape - particularly in the Chitradurga region, this time, I noticed a group of windmasts while crossing Belgaum.

Development hungry India needs a lot of energy. Coal and thermal alone cant meet this requirement. That is where non-conventional energy kicks in.

***




Look at this. From a mile away on the Udaipur ghat section, you simply cannot escape noticing this Vodafone signage! Nothing can take away its positioning.

***




Four crew members caught up on Dharwad city entry gate. These two crew were moving in opposite direction: one to Salem (on which I was travelling) and the other one to Gujarat carrying Tafe's Massey Ferguson tractors. We were carting Mahindra's Arjun Ultra.

Since entry into Dharwad city will not open for heavy vehicles till 10 in the night, we halted. The Gujarat-bound halted seeing their colleagues. For the next 3-4 hours - all of them hailing from Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh got into animated conversations. By the way, they bought several kilos of alphonso mango for taking home. I could not touch one! My foot, diabetes is the spoilsport!

***




It was around 7 a.m. I spotted this Rajput on a horse slowly trotting towards Rajsamand. I kept on clicking him at various distances. When I framed him against the Mercurio Pallia 22 metre car carrier as the backdrop, my joy knew no bounds. I liked the composition.

***



I always like tunnels because of darkness. This one - 1.5 km long Katraj tunnel after crossing Pune city made me happy. It was cool inside while the mercury outside was hovering around 40 degrees celsius.

***



No word can describe the beauty of mother and child combo. This was shot at Bhim village, 100 km away from Ajmer at Driver Vikram Singh's village where I stayed one night. Under the open sky with stars on a moonless night. The wild insects caused such a havoc on my exposed body that I had to go for medical attention at Halol and jump out of Mercurio Pallia car carrier.

***



Tragedy also brings a bit of melancholy. Having lost all my belongings at Kolhapur, with Driver Zubaidar Khan in tow, we kept wandering in search of those lost items. The day was breaking. For a while I forgot about my loss, and began looking at this beautiful sun rise.

***



After a very long time, saw hen and chicken in public place. Tell me, when was the last time you saw a live hen and chicken at play? These birds were strutting around a roadside dhaba near Surat where we halted for brushing teeth and morning tea.

***



Shot on the Bombay Pune Expressway.

***



Near Belgaum saw these small houses on the hillock painted with Airtel promos. But from a distance these houses looked like rocks and the memories of Pepsi/Coke painting the rocks in Manali/Kulu a few years ago which caused a nationwide consternation forcing courts to move in and making the culprits to restore rocks to their original status.

Lucky these were homes, but some rocks!

ROADTRIP: Funding non-existing organisations?




Mr S K Dash IAS
Joint Secretary
Ministry of Road Transport & Highways
Government of India
New Delhi
Tel: 2371 7294

Dear Sir,
Re: Driver Training Programme Under Government Funding - Bonafides of beneficiary
Greeting.

I invite your attention to RT-25019/2/2005-RS (Part III) dated 31 March 2011 issued by Mr Anand Prakash, Director (RT) and Designated Officer (de facto PIO) in your ministry. Mr Prakash was responding to Mr Chittaranjan Das, Secretary General, All India Confederation of Goods Vehicles Owners Association application dated February 25, 2011. Mr Prakash has marked a copy of his response to you as well and indicated that you are the first appellate authority in this case. Hence this missive to you.

Just to refresh your memory, Mr Prakash has given a list of names of eminent organisations that would be receiving government funding in the near future for “conducting refresher training programmes for HMV drivers”.

One such name listed was Karnataka Goods Transporters’ Welfare Association, 85, First Floor, Gangama Rangasetty complex, Third Main, First Cross, Tharagupet, Bangalore 560002.

On 16 May 2011, I happened to be in Bangaluru and decided to catch up with the office bearers of the Karnataka Goods Transporters’ Welfare Association. Therefore, I visited the premises mentioned in Mr Prakash’s letter to Dass.

To my utter dismay and disappointment, I found that the so called “eminent organisation” enlisted by the Ministry of Road Transport & Highways for imparting refresher training programme for HMV drivers DID NOT exist at all. A thorough enquiry with the occupants of the building where several lorry transport agents operate in this predominantly transport hub revealed that even they have never heard of this organisation.

Mr Srinivasa Rao, Secretary of Bangalore City Lorry Transport Agents’ Association, who operates from the same area also stated that he has heard the name of Karnataka Goods Transporters’ Welfare Association for the first time from me.

Given the fact that the public fund is being earmarked for utilisation for a purported useful cause, I reckon it is of utmost importance that this financial assistance should reach the needy and genuine organisation.

I am sure the Ministry of Road Transport & Highways has done its “due diligence” before deciding to confer the “eminent organisation” status on Karnataka Goods Transporters’ Welfare Association.

May I request you, Sir, to look into your records and check the veracity of statements and documents submitted by Karnataka Goods Transporters’ Welfare Assocation to become “eligible” for government funding.

I will appreciate an acknowledgement of this mail and later when whatever action is being initiated.

I am currently touring through India on heavy commercial vehicles to understand the logistical challenges on the national highways and examine the support system HMV drivers receive while on duty from various stakeholders.

I am Delhi-based and will surely call on you on my return in mid-June.

Warm regards

Ramesh Kumar
Consulting Editor
Saarc Journal of Transport & Logistics Times
New Delhi, India

Copy to:
Hon’ble Minister Dr C P Joshi, Minister for Road Transport & Highways
Govt of India, New Delhi
The Prime Minister’s Office, New Delhi

ROADTRIP: Letter to Karnataka Transport Commissioner


Mr Shyam Bhat
Transport Commissioner
Government of Karnataka
Bangaluru

Dear Sir,

Sub: RTOs on Karnataka highways – Use of private agents by RTOs – Legitimacy Issue

Greetings.

I am on a nationwide tour on national highways in heavy commercial vehicles.

I left Delhi in the first week of this month and over the past 2-3 days have crossed into Karnataka state border from Maharasthra.

I must admit that the landscape of Karnataka right from the moment one enters the state is breath-taking. However, I would be hesistant to declare the same sentiments towards your Road Transport Officers (RTOs), who man the highways like vultures.

Let me give two specific incidents that I had witnessed in Davengere and Chitradurga. On 13th May, around 6.30 in the morning, the heavy commercial vehicle on which I was travelling from Bombay to Bangaluru with Mahendra Tractors en route to Salem, we are stopped by two individuals wielding sticks.

On stopping, our driver was forcefully asked to go and meet the government vehicle parked on the other side of the National Highway 4 immediately after crossing Davengere. My driver had obliged by doing so. From my seat inside the HCV cabin, I saw him handing over his documents to someone whom I could not figure out. A little later, I also witnessed my driver handing over some currency notes to the person sitting inside the government vehicle.

When the driver returned to the cabin, I asked him about what happened. Inside that government vehicle was a RTO sitting in police uniform and demanded ‘fee’ to permit his vehicle to proceed further. He obliged to suffer loss of time. That’s when the driver revealed that the RTO demanded Rs.100 and got it promptly.

A few kilometres down the same NH 4, we ran into half a dozen private individuals – again wielding sticks – halting a lot of commercial vehicles. Like last time, a government vehicle was parked on the other side and a bevy of drivers were being “interrogated” by un-uniformed private individuals before being passed onto the RTO who was sitting inside the car.

This time, I decided to move closer to the RTO and check out the reality. The private guards of RTO were rough and tough. There was a quite an interesting interaction between me and RTO. He too got his pound of flesh.

Am attaching my version of the complete episode for your perusal and suitable action.

Sir, my question is very simple:

Does the state government of Karnataka and you as the custodian of law and order in the entire state permit private individuals to work as agents for RTOs?
If so, can you provide me the relevant legislative or administrative support of this “initiative”?
Is there any random checks carried out on RTOs to curb such corrupt practices? If so, can you share the details?

After all, it is the public exchequer that is being looted by unscrupulous RTOs. For arguments sake assuming the HCVs were violating the law of the land, if they were properly challaned and receipted that revenue would have accrued to the government and not gone into the pockets of unscrupulous elements.

I tried to you reach over your mobile phone in vain.

Hence this letter.

I will be in Bangaluru till Wednesday afternoon.

If you can spare sometime I would like to come and meet you in person.
For your information, I am proceeding to Mangalore from here and then proceed to Tamil Nadu.
I am reachable at 09711544181.

Look forward to hearing from you,

Cheers

Ramesh Kumar
Consulting Editor
Saarc Journal of Transport & Logistics Times
New Delhi, India

Copy to:
Hon’ble Minister Dr C P Joshi, Minister for Road Transport & Highways
Govt of India, New Delhi
Mr Satish Gujral, Chairman, National Highway Authority of India, New Delhi
Dr S P Ramesh, Inspector General of Police, Govt of Karnataka
The Prime Minister’s Office, New Delhi

ROADTRIP: What's Soman Nambiar upto?



Though as part of my profession, I run into scores of practitioners – both owner-promoters and professionals – almost on a daily basis, very few impress the most. Even if the meeting is only once, the image and the interaction remains etched forever. If that person happens to be bereft of arrogance and full of wisdom and willing to share with no compunction and treats the other person with respect, the pleasure for a journalist multiplies several fold.
Soman Nambiar, ex-Ceva Logistics top honcho, is one such personality. I had met him last July a few weeks before he bid goodbye to a full time career and moved out of Gurgaon to settle down in Bangalore to pursue his new found passion: to assist his better half’s NGO aptly named ActionAid. Before one jumps to conclusion that is finito for his 35-long arduous career in logistics and supply chain, the bearded Soman has not hung up his boots. However, he is not looking for a full time re-entry, but mentoring and Board level representations he is not averse to.
During my recent sojourn through Bangalore to understand the logistical challenges of heavy commercial vehicles passing through several states, I called him up to seek a meeting. His okay came within no time. He chose Sunday – the day of Sabbath – to catch up. He chose the venue of KSCA Stadium Club where he is a member for over 25 years. Remember that he was returning from a short vaction from Thekkady that morning with his spouse and could have opted out of the committed meeting.
On the morning of meeting, he confirmed the meeting. Like an excited child anticipating the arrival of the uncle from abroad with goodies – because he has never disappointed in the past – I cancelled few other not-so-important engagements and stepped into the KSCA Stadium Club sharply at 1 p.m. for an encounter with the one and only Soman. How much he would have changed post-retirement? Has he shaved his trade mark flowing beard? Has he thinned out? Not that he was too bulky. Will he speak up his mind – like he did last time? This worry came because I was unsure whether he was truly given up a full time career and wondered whether he was still nursing hopes of staging a comeback with a new outfit in the segment. If so, Soman would be diplomatic and would not like to speak his mind on others. Understandable.

“Arrived. At the Parking”, flashed the message on my Blackberry a few minutes before 2 p.m. Yes, he was late by 30 minutes from the appointed hour. It was a pleasant surprise to see him in flowery beach shirt and thank God, his beard was in tact. He apologized for the late arrival and then hugged. No formal handshakes. Mind you, this was my second meeting over the past year, though we keep exchanging messages and talk occasionally over phone.

The KSCA Stadium Club was crowded , but not packed to the brim on the Sunday afternoon. We debated over whether we should occupy the high stools at the bar or opt for a conventional table for two and settled down on the latter. Having placed the order for beer for me and vodka for him – and chicken tikka for him and paneer tikka for me – we are ready for the dialogue over the next three hours.

He was gentleman to the core. Never took a phone call during the interaction, though his Blackberry kept buzzing at regular intervals. Never once did he glance at his handset. Never once did he say that he was tired and wanting to cut short the meet and return home for rest. Never once did he hesitate to give his opinion in various issues: about the caliber of professionals at various MNCs operating in the logistics and supply chain sphere in India. Whom he rates as the most dynamic and innovative domestic player and why? Whom all he wooed as Ceva Logistics head honcho and why those overtures did not materialize? Why China would always score over India in manufacturing sector – the backbone of logistics and supply chain service providers? What’s wrong with our policy framework?

Was he upset when the new owners at Ceva Logistics told him that he need to go because they want to bring in an expat as the new honcho? Post-Ceva Logistics, what is he upto? Any chance of him coming back in full gear? Well, my quiver of questions was unstoppable. He batted like Chris Gayle of Royal Challenger Bangalore: full of vigour and aggression. Apt perhaps we were swigging our vodka and beer from our respective receptacles in the headquarters of RCB and a few hundred metres away from the pitch that witnessed many battles – at various levels such as Tests, ODIs and IPL.

Soman was in great mood. I was getting late for my next appointment at another part of town. Otherwise I would have jolly well kept on listening to the pearls of wisdom from this hardcore professional (see his profile which I did last year in a separate blogposting).

He quietly signed the bill, left a huge tip for the waiter, spoke to them in muttering Kannada, Hindi and English in between and walked me down to the KSCA Stadium gate.
Never once did he tell me any remark of his were “off the record”. True professional. He knows his onions. What more to say?
Well, what did he say? You wonder.
I can understand your curiosity. I will let the cat out of the bag soon.
Just for starters, here is something to mull over:
“MNC bosses operating in this sphere look at India posting as a job with a lot of perks. Not enthusiastic to push hard”
“Mahendra Agarwal (of Gati) is the only visionary in this segment.”

By the by, here is one more interesting nugget of information that may interest you:

Do you know Soman Nambiar applied for and got a Driving Licence for Heavy Commercial Vehicle? And do you know that he literally DROVE a truck loaded with goods from Vijayawada to Mumbai several years ago to understand the challenges of plying on Indian roads first hand?

Ciao.

ROADTRIP: Roadside Vultures


It was early morning and we have been onroad with Mohammed Ayub Khan at the wheels of Leyland 2518 model carrying six Arjun Ultra tractors from the assembly lines of Mahindra plant at Kandivli, Mumbai. A day after I was a victim of highway robbery 10 kilometres before Kolhapur in Maharasthra (more about it in a separate dispatch), it was jointly decided that our night halt would be in an absolutely securitized environment and luckily we found one on NH 4 an hour after we left Dharwad, Karnataka. Yes, we slept well under the guardianship of the lathi-wielding, but limping Abubaker.

Sharp three in the morning, we woke us and ensured we vacated the open lot after a hot cuppa. Bearded Ayub bhai, hailing from Pratapgarh, situated hardly 70 km from Sultanpur in Uttar Pradesh, began the journey which he promised would ensure I would sleep in a pucca bed and mattress instead of on the foam-rubber seat-cum-sleeping berth inside the Leyland cabin over the past 10 days. Soon after we passed Davengere, a man in casuals halted us abruptly in the middle of the road while waving a stick at us. Cursing his fate, Ayub parked the vehicle on the side and got out.

Picking up his papers (vehicle documents) and invoice of material being carried, he crossed the road to the while government vehicle parked on the other side of the NH 4. From inside the Leyland cabin, I could not visualize the gent who was conversing with Ayub bhai, but from the expression of my driver colleague I could see he is distressed. In no time, Ayub was back and gave to vent to his anger by using some unprintable words as an abuse against the officer who he had met.

Prodded, he revealed that the RTO belongs to Davengere and demanded his pound of flesh threatening that he would file a case against Rinku Commercial Carriers Vehicle which Ayub was driving for violating several sections of the Motor Vehicles Act. He was offered two choices: permit RTO to seize the vehicle, go to the court and get it released; or, cough up a fee. A cool bribe is all demanded as if it is RTO’s birth right. Ayub parted with Rs.100 and got himself relieved from the rigmarole of surrendering the vehicle and retrieving the same after a long drawn court procedure.

“I never expected this RTO here,” averred Ayub, “because we had long ago crossed Davengere and now we are in Chitradurga.” If Ayub were to be believed, the RTO Davengere has no business to be waiting like a roadside vulture in Chitradurga territory. I simply have no idea about this “corruption jurisdiction”.
That’s when I asked Ayub whether he had paid the checkpost at Karnataka border when we entered from Maharashtra. He said, “No”. He only paid an “Entry” fee – meaning Rs.300 as bribe to the official at the border. Thereby saving a hefty Rs.1500-2000 fee which goes into the state exchequer with a receipt. This route of crossing any state by paying “entry fee” at the point of entry and exit (another Rs.300 or so) to another corrupt state border official works out much cheaper for the driver than paying upfront a big fat fee to the interstate border and riding with no worries at all. Why drivers prefer the entry option demands another story. We will tackle it at a later stage. But the risk is huge. Drivers confess that given the poor salary conditions of theirs, non-payment of official fee and instead settling for some bribe is their only route to livelihood on highways. Motor maliks, please note.

Before we could recover from the RTO Davengere episode, we spotted half a dozen tilk-sporting, fat and slim guys stopping vehicles on both sides of the highway. Yes, a government vehicle was parked on the other side. We were in Chitradurga territory. Several commercial vehicles were parked on both sides and a long queue of drivers were surrounding the government vehicle. Releasing another unprintable expletive, Ayub jumped out with relevant papers. I decided to go along with him this time to watch the drama from close quarters. A thick moustaichoed – looked like a sidekick of any filmy villain – but with a tikka on his forehand.

“Kya re, kiska gaddi hai?” demanded that fatso.
“RCC ka,” responded Ayub.
I was in ear’s shot and could listen to every syllable uttered.
“Ah, Rinku ka gaddi hai!” The sarcasm in the voice could not go unnoticed.
Ayub “yes”sed.
“Maloom hai, aap kya zuroom kiya hai?” another shot from the fatso.
Ayub remained silent.
There was a long silence.
Meanwhile, I looked into the vehicle and noticed the police uniformed RTO without a cap was sitting in the seat, looking at the document surrendered by another driver and feigning to examine the same. Fair complexion. He would be taller than me, if we were to stand next to each other. A little over six feet.
The fatso told Ayub to go the officer sitting in the car.
Ayub inched towards RTO.
I moved in closer. By now, the RTO gang of coolies noticed my presence near the vehicle. I did not look like a driver or conductor and hence stood like a sore thumb. I knew it.
“Aap kaon?” demanded the fatso.
I smiled at him.
“Aap driver hai? Conductor hai? Truck ka malik hai?” It was fatso again.
“Mein koi nahin hoon,” I responded.
“Phir, aap idhar kya kar raho ho?”
I responded with “Mein aisa e dekh ne ke liye aya hoon”.
“Yeh drama hai kya?” asked the fatso.
I switched over to English and “What is your problem if I stand here. I am curious to know what you guys are upto.”
Fatso quickly looked at RTO inside the vehicle, hinting that he should handle me. The language of English rattles a lot. Not a highway friendly lingo.
Now it was RTO’s turn: “Who are you?”
“How does it matter to you?” I asked him. Then switching over to Hindi, I uttered: “Aapko taqleef kya hai?”
“No, no. You are standing near my vehicle. So I am asking,” he replied.
“I am a citizen of this country. And I have every right to stand wherever I want,” I told him.
He was foxed. I cursed my stupidity for this Hindi film style dialogue.
“You don’t understand me, Sir. Are you with any of these drivers? Owner’s representative?” he asked.
“Am no owner but travelling with him (pointed to Ayub),” I responded.
“Look at this. This man (Ayub) is behaving like a sheep. He is not answering any of our queries. Have you noticed that his vehicle is carrying tractors which are jutting outside the vehicle dimensions. It is illegal. We can challan him, you know?”
I said, “ok”.
“Sir, since you are only a passenger on that vehicle, please go and sit there,” the fatso joined now.
RTO to Ayub: “I have to challan you. Kya karna hai, batao?”
Ayub: “thoda time deeji ye.”
Ayub spoke to someone on his mobile and returned.
RTO: “Yeh Rinku ka gaddi hai!” said suddenlty.
Ayub: “Haan, sirji”.
It is significant to note that RCC has fighting a legal suit against a RTO officer in Davengere/Chitradurga for allegedly beating up their driver and putting them in jail for five days a few months ago. RCC officials during my interaction with them in Anand corporate headquarters shared these details with me and the case is still sub judice.
RCC is a anathema to RTOs in Karnataka. Harassment is to be expected. But one positive effect of this right against highway corrupt practices is that RTOs are a little scared of taking RCC head on because they have come to realize that RCC would not mind fighting them legally.
RTO handed over the documents back to Ayub and looked at him closely.
Now fatso intervened and told Ayub, “ok. Rs.100 de do”.
Ayub pinched a Rs.100 note from his almost empty wallet and tried to give it to RTO.
“Pagal ho gaya hai kya?” shouted the RTO. He was eyeing me at the same time.
He meant that he does not directly receive this “bakshish”, but has to be handed over to one of his gang members.
Ayub parted with Rs.100 to one of the gang members and we walked back to the vehicle.
“Agar, hamara naam RCC nahi hoti to, yeh RTO hamse Rs.300 liya hoga,” said Ayub triumphantly.
Once back in the vehicle, I asked Ayub as to the real identify of these gang.
Much to my surprise, I learnt that except the RTO, others were his private agents who help the government official to abruptly halt commercial vehicles on the highway and help him collect his “unofficial fees”. RTO at the end of each operation, shares a small portion with this private goondas!
Atuylya bharat, such mooch!
My one regret that I was unable to know the identity of the RTO because his nametag pinned on his chest was written in Kannada, not in English. The “MVD” (motor vehicles department?) brass tag pinned on his right shoulder did not glow since he was sitting inside the vehicle, not out in the early morning sun.
One thing I must appreciate. The RTO was up and awake so early in the morning and performing his “duty”. Since he was again sporting tikka, I presumed he almost ought to have bathed and come to the battlefield – nay, the national highway! Look at the amount of trouble he has taken it upon himself! Mera Bharat mahaan, no doubt.

ROADTRIP: On the blade's edge


“Uncle, you should not trust drivers. They are big thieves,” alerted Meenalochani, my daughter’s friend last November when I began to criss cross India on trucks to understand the logistical nightmare of moving commercials goods on Indian highways. My better half seconded that opinion. I did not. One, Meenalochani is a cop’s daughter and her innate suspicion is to be expected. Secondly, wives are always protective of their spouses. So no extra precaution to protect my wife presented gold chain (approximately Rs.20,000) and a golden ring worth approx. Rs.10,000. Add to this, my Dell laptop, Sony Handicam, Blackberry, and a Nokia E90 (for recording purposes) plus some cash onroad expenses. A little over one lakh Rupees. So the spousal worry is to be understandable.


I never had any problems on the security of my belonging over the past six months during which I had covered over 6,000 kilometres on highways in the company of drivers and conductors. I never suspected any one of them. Each was a genuine character. Many had taken me to their homes for introduction to their huge families and had spent time in their electric powerless homes. Many felt I was like their father figure because most of my driver companions were in their 20s. A family bonding, I have no hesitation to boast of. They are as much God’s creation as I am. Or you, the reader of this piece.

But what happened on 12 May night was unforgettable. We had left Kandivli, Bombay at three in the morning with Mahindra’s Arjun Ultra tractors (six in number) for delivery to Dharwad with Zubaidar Khan, hailing from Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh. He did not have a conductor and I was his only companion. We traversed through the interiors of Maharashtra: Pune and Satara and hardly 10 kilometres before Kolhapur decided to go for night half. He approached an Indian Oil petrol pump for night halt and the guy demanded Rs.20 for his security services which Zubaidar felt was too much on the higher side and declined the spot. His offer was Rs.10 for the night halt. Soon he found an open spot in front of Bharat Petroleum pump on the highway and opted for it. But there was no space inside the pump lot because it was choc-a-bloc with windmill carriers and car-carriers and assorted vehicles. However, the service road slot had space for two vehicles and Zubaidar chose the outer one closer to the Highway which was hardly one and a half metre away! That close. The traffic was pretty heavy when we spread our blanket inside the cabin and decided to go to sleep.

Zubaidar chose the inside longer slot and I opted the frontside – a little shorter one, but breadthwise more comfortable. My holdall containing my clothes, medicines, three business card folders, trip notes (300 page), Amul factory visit notes on loose sheets, my shoes for possible use if needed, my toiletries etc. Zubaidar kept it at his headside. My laptop, camera, wallet, mobile phones were dumped into my laptop bag and kept inside the space over which Khan was sleeping. I covered myself with a blanket brought from home and grabbed Dame Sleep. When you travel on highways particularly on a truck which moves at 45 kmph in May heat, the moment you hit the bed, you are dead. Add the fact that past midnight the weather always remain cooler irrespective of day temperature.

Don’t know when but I felt some movement and turned around and saw the driver side door was ajar and a lean character was standing on the roadside. I mistook him for the cleaner of the neighbouring vehicle which again was carrying Rinku Commercial Carrier’s Mahindra Tractors to Salem. Abu, the driver of that vehicle (with whom I would travel later from Dharwad to Bangalore) and Zubaidar are colleagues. Why the driver side door was open did not strike me. Perhaps Zubaidar would have kept the door open so that fresh air seeps inside. There was no electric fan inside the cabin.
A little later, I felt a hand over my neck and I woke up with a shriek: “Who’s that?” I quickly sat up and felt that my left hand was holding a piece of my gold chain. The hand was near my navel button. When did my gold chain became so long to reach my navel button? I wondered all in a flash of moment. “Chain, Chain”, I shouted. Zubaidar got up quickly.
“Kya hua?”
I told him somebody has broken my gold chain.
“Thief, thief,” I shouted.
Zubaidar switched on the cabin light and he saw me trembling with a broken golden chain in my hand.
He jumped out, shouting, “Kaun hai re?”. He ran around the truck two times. I also got out. Across the road, we could see a torch light moving fast. We thought the thief was from the village across the road and was dashing back.
Zubaidar knocked on the door of Ayub’s vehicle. He also got out. Both began exchanging notes and tried to see what to do.
Then, to our surprise we noticed that front side glass panel of our trck was missing. The thief removed this glass and put his hand inside and opened the cabin to enter inside to check.

I climbed into the cabin to check whether the missing portion of my golden chain was lying inside. It was not. But to my horror, I found my holdall missing!
“Zubaidarbhai, my bag is missing,” I shouted.
“What?” he screamed.
He climbed up and checked and confirmed that my bag was also missing.
I lost everything. Nothing to wear. I had to buy fresh clothes – right from undies to shirts, pants, shoes, and above all my medicinal kit (am diabetic and carry my stuff everywhere!). On the eve of my departure on this trip from Delhi to Chennai and elsewhere, my daughter presented me a set of T shirts and collarless, screaming headline colour banians. One of them was the duplicate of Salman Khan made famous “Being Human” grey banian. Medicine for a month gone missing.
“What about your laptop?” demand Zubaidar.
We opened the bench over which he was sleeping and found the laptop in tact. Thank God.
What to do? I have to meet people in Dharwad and Bangalore. What to wear?
Forget about dress. How to replace the lost business card folders (three in number). All contacts lost. My foot! I was cursing myself.
More than 300 business cards!
These are very invaluable, believe it or not.
We all live in a networked world. One look at the card and I would be able to recollect precisely when did I meet that person and what exactly we discussed as conversational starter. All that is lost! Oh my God!
Well, then the Big Worry. How to share this misfortune with my wife? How will they react? Should I hide this fact till I go home? Meenalochani will have the last laugh. I told you so, I can hear her taunting me at a future date when we meet.
I decided to share this with my family and the world. Not through a call. But through my twitter and facebook posting. Since my phone connection is not trustworthy, my family keeps track of me through these postings.
I tweeted about the midnight robbery without any loss of time from my Blackberry.
That’s when Ayub noticed the cut on the back of my yellow T shirt. The thief had cut my T shirt from the back and reached out to my gold chain. While he grabbed it gently, the rudraksha bead attached the chain got entangled in my sacred thread and the ‘pull’ awoken me. He ran away with half of my golden chain. I removed the T shirt to look at the blade cut. He had made four or five cuts to reach the chain! The blade ought to have been very sharp. I never felt the tip of the instrument.
Demoralised I was. Should I call police and report? Should be cancel the trip and return home? Going to police was ruled out because if it becomes a legal case, I had to keep coming to Kolhapur to attend any enquiry. I don’t want that because I have no time and energy for those things. Seconldy there is no guarantee that approaching police would help me anyway recovering my stuff. It’s gone.
We patiently waited for the day break. For over three hours we never slept. Once day broke, we stepped out and crossed the road began searching the open field and beyond for any telltale signs of my bag. There was some construction acitivity going on and felt some of the labourers might have attempted this small time crookery. We spent more than an hour on the other side of the highway with no results.
Then we crossed to our side and began the search again. After an hour, suddenly Zubaidar shouted, “Look there!”

I looked in the pointed direction. Under the bush, my red bag was lying opened. All my belongings were lying on ground. My notebooks. My shoes. My medicine. My business card folders. My Oats cookies. One packet containing 3 oats was opened. It appeared he bit into one and found it is not upto his taste and threw it away. Ants were feasting on them. They loved it, I felt.
I was glad that my clothing problem is sorted out. To certain extent, my wife won’t scream. Of course, she would over the loss of chain – partly, I would try to convince her.
I collected my stuff and moved back to our vehicle.

I began rearranging the stuff. Ran my fingers through each item. They would have been lost forever. Luckily, the thief felt my belongings were of no use to him.
Zubaidar surmised that the first time, the thief came and decamped with the bag. After foraging through it, he felt the owner of this holder seems to be an educated guy. But where is the money? So he returned second time to check. He could not locate my laptop bag which held money, camera, mobile phone etc. Then decided to look for any valuable item. Then perhaps noticed the gleaming golden chain under his minute torch and attempted the daring chain snatch. He half succeeded. No, he half failed. Thanks to my sacred thread or yagnopavitham and the rudraksha bead.
Significantly the rudraksha bead is a gift from my late father in law who used to wear them 40 years ago! Thanks, my Father in Law! Who says sacred thread is useless? I won’t – particularly after this drama in my half on the Indian highway!

Monday, 9 May 2011

Who cares for road safety?


Shri R S Gujral
Chairman
National Highway Authority of India
New Delhi
India

Dear Mr Gujral,

Sub: Unsafe Carriage of Marble Stones on NH8 in Rajasthan

Currently on a roadtrip starting from New Delhi to various parts of India using heavy commercial vehicles as a mode of transport to understand highway conditions and other related issues – including the highhandedness of police and RTOs in dealing with truck drivers.

Yesterday I was passing through the state of Rajasthan. I began to notice a heavy flow of HCVs loaded with massive stone structures on the trailer bed with no “strings attached”. None of the truck drivers cared to tie these massive marble stones being carried for business purposes. According to residents of Bhim taluka where I had halted for a day, these stones are being carried from Rajsamand where they are mined to Kishanrgarh for cutting and polishing. A solid distance of 200 odd kilometres. In a 24 hour cycle, these truckers deliver and return to Rajmasand for fresh load.

Many on this stretch claim a lot of accidents have taken place, neither the state government (Rajasthan government in this case), nor National Highway Authority of India have initiated any steps to stop this unsafe carriage of marble stones. It is also reliably learnt that many state level politicians and bureaucrats are benami owners of such truck business and it is alleged explain the unresponsiveness of NHAI and Rajasthan government.

Sir, considering the fact that the present Minister in charge of Road Transport and Highways Mr C P Joshi hails from this state, it is shocking to witness this callousness of NHAI. Mr Joshi’s own part – Congress – rules the state. It is nothing short of shameful. Monetary considerations seem to have put the life of “aam janta” on a death threat.

Sir, it is high time NHAI moves in quickly to ensure some stringent norms are implemented and make truckers carrying such massive marble stones are per force compelled to tie their ware in whatever way possible to ensure the safety of other road users.

Let us not forget that fact that most of these trucks are “overloaded” carrying material beyond their capacity permitted. So, imagine the amount of wear and tear the expensive national highways suffer which has been funded from the public chequer. While it is laudable that the Ministry of Road Transport & Highways is pursuing the dream of 20 km/day construction of fresh highways, it is equally of paramount importance to safeguard the existing ones.

It is sad that despite the Supreme Court 2005 ruling on overload, no one is listening.

If Overdimensional Cargo (ODC) carriers are complying with strict regulations, why not the marble stone carriers?

Am marking of this note to Hon’ble Minister Mr P C Joshi, Rajasthan Chief Minister Mr Ashok Gehlot and Mrs Sonia Gandhi, President of Indian National Congress whose party rules Rajasthan. Of course, a copy goes to the Prime Minister’s Office as well.

Look forward to hearing from you,

Sincerely,

Ramesh Kumar
Consulting Editor,
SAARC Journal of Transport & Logistics Times

Cc:

Mr C P Joshi, Hon’ble Minister of Road Transport & Highways, Govt of India
Mr Ashok Gehlot, Chief Minister, Rajasthan
Mrs Sonia Gandhi, President, Indian National Congress
The Prime Minister’s Office

ROADTRIP: @ Rinku's Stockyard



It was almost six months ago, I had run into Rinku alias Rajan Agarwal, the youngest son of Prahlad Agarwal , the owner-promoter of Rinku Commercial Carriers in Chennai at an international automotive logistics conference. We were biting into our soft roti (Indian bread) and accompanying vegetable curry form our respective plates at the dining hall during lunch break. Between bites we exchanged notes – not business cards because he had already run out of them as it was the last day of the 3-day conference - on his company’s focus on 3PL operations for leading farm tractors in India. An invitation to visit his corporate office in Anand, in the western state of one of the most prosperous industrialized states of India viz., Gujrat. Anand is on the global map thanks to the milk revolution ushered in by a man called Dr V K Kurien 50 years ago through a cooperative effort of local cattle-breeding farmers.

Prahalad actually stumbled upon carting tractors by a sheer coincidence. In early late 1970s and early 1980s, he was providing logistics support to Gujrat based Elecon which was supplying Neyveli Lignite Corporation in the southern state of Tamil Nadu some parts on a regular basis. His fleet used to return empty through the 1400 km. It was a huge loss. That is when, he ran into Kiran Desai, Anand-based dealer for TAFE, a leading farm tractor manufacturer. Desai was bringing TAFE tractors on rail network which was time consuming, but the demand was huge given the agrarian base of the state. When Desai was approached by Agarwal about his proposal to cart TAFE from its manufacturing plant in the southern state of Kerala – hardly a few hundred kilometers from Neyveli Lignite Corporation, it was sweet music to Desai’s ears. Reasons were far too to seek. One, his supply would increase. And the frequency as well. Agarwal indicated he could bring in 2 tractors in every return trip: one lined up after another on the flat-bed rigid trailer. Desai was willing to shed out Rs.5,000 for each tractor. More tractors mean multiplies of Rs.5,000 for Agarwal.

Gradually the tally increased to six and seven tractors on each trip with minor modifications to his fleet. Since then AGarwal has not looked back. And Desai has joined Agarwal as Strategic Advisor long ago. Now they have Mahindra & Mahindra (the numero uno player in tractors segment), Swaraj (again owned by Mahindra group), Indo Farm etc besides TAFE.

On the first leg of my nationwide onroad trip on nothing but heavy commercial vehicles (trucks), a casual call from Halol (100 km from Anand) enabled me to touch base with Rinku who incidentally happen to be hardly 40 km away (Baroda) on a hot and sultry Sunday afternoon. He offered to pick me up and cart me to Anand to show me his ops. I did not refuse. In no time, I was a guest of Rinku.
His stockyard was marvelous. Liked uniformed soldiers lined up for daily drill, these gleaming machines greeted me. The turnaround time for these tractors is roughly 30 days. Each tractor approximately costs Rs.325,000 (US$1 = Rs.45). When Agarwal senior began business, the tractors used to cost Rs.10,000/-

Way back in the 1970s, Agarwal did a bit of car-carrier business – carting Fiat cars from Kurla, Bombay manufacturing plant to Chennai. This business was shut down following the closure of Fiat. Nonetheless, RCC did a bit of business with Maruti Suzuki before deciding not to be a small fish in a big pond, but be a significant player in a small pond. Last year, RCC carted 68000 tractors in toto.

The sixty plus Agarwal’s Rs.40 crore empire is managed by eldest son Ajay (finance and administration), Rinku (liaisoning and trouble shooting), son-in-law Vikram Daruka (operations) based out of Nagpur. With Kiran Desai providing strategic iinputs, the family owned business is on an even keel. He is not overtly ambitious. One thing is keen about is that he wants RCC to be absolutely debt free. As of now, the short term loans from banks constitute hardly 10% of the turnover.

Agarwal’s heart beats for the welfare of truck operators. He had financed many of his drivers to buy their own trucks and operate as a business. He has fought for drivers who were harassed by RTOs. He is ever ready to fight corruption on highways.

ROADTRIP: Under the bus shelter


Under a bus shelter
It was the third night since I left Delhi on my roadtrip and Driver Vikram Singh carrying 10 Tata Ace HT tempos valued at Rs.2.5 million for Bangalore decided to halt at Dimapura after we exited Rajasthan at Shamlaji Border checkpost and entered Gujarat.

As usual, we found a huge parking lot of a roadside eatery (dhaba) near Dimapura and called it halt. It was past 11 p.m. and the traffic on NH 8 was thinning with more trucks deciding to halt and dine. Vikram was bone tried because he was stretched on the coir-matted cot even after the basic roti-dal (Indian bread and cooked pulses) arrived. Quickly we finished and Vikram decided to gulp down some hot milk before going to bed. We have been driving since 10 in the morning after leaving Bhim.

While I took the lower berth inside driver’s cabin, Vikram opted for the upper berth. Raju, his younger brother and co-driver, decided to sleep on top of the carrier. Yes, on the roof of the carrier under which 10 Tata ACE tempos are decked in two tiers of five each. I had no idea about this sleeping till the next morning when Raju revealed the truth.

In my earlier trips, the third guy in the crew invariably slept over the two seats in the front by putting a wooden plank and soft blanket over the engine hood inside the cabin.

May is usually a hot month and the heat was unbearable. I was sweating. The TR 10 model Tata truck had no fans inside the cabin. Surprising that the previous version TR 8 had.

Around 3 in the morning, bladder pressure was building up and I got out of the cabin. I could hear Vikram’s snoring from the upper berth. After easing out, when I returned, to my horror I found I could not open the cabin door from outside. It was pitch dark. There were more than a dozen trucks of various sizes were parked and am sure drivers were in deep sleep due to the hard living they lead on a daily basis. Despite the best highway stretch in Rajasthan after we crossed Udaipur and entered Gujarat, the ghat section was strenuous.

What to do when you are locked out? I tried to knock on the shut glass window. Vikram was unmoveable. The self appointed watchman of the yard – who gets paid by the drivers for keeping a watch on their vehicles when they are dead asleep when they leave the next morning – noticed my predicament and could not help much except suggesting that I go and sleep in the dhaba where there were several empty cots.
I quietly walked to the dhaba where the TV set was running Dharam Veer – an action drama set in a periodic era with costumes of royalty featuring the He-man Dharmendra and jumping Jack Jitendra. Except the person manning the cash counter, no one was awake. And no one was watching the movie except the man at the counter!

I pulled up a Neel Kamal plastic chair and sat down. Feeling thirsty, I gulped down water from a plastic jug. Remembered my wife’s admonition to drink only “bottled mineral water”! Watched the movie in silence for how long I don’t know. The movie did not end by the time I decided to revisit the truck and try my luck with the cabin door. The self appointed watchman was sitting next to our truck. I tried to climb to the highrise cabin window and knock in vain. Oh My God!
I looked at the watch: 3.12 it showed. Oh. What to do?
There was absolutely no steady flow of trucks on the highway, but at intervals I heard and saw some passing by without halting in both directions. I stood on the highway. When was the last time I had this misfortune? Never, I consoled.
What to do? I can’t be standing on the highway the whole night. I was feeling sleepy. One truck going towards Baroda halted and enquired whether I was stranded and looking for a ride. I said ‘no’ and moved away.
Why not walk a bit like a early morning walk? I am used to waking up at 4 in the morning for morning walks over the past several years : at home (Delhi) or in Muscat, Dubai or Bahrain. The only difference this time would be I would be walking on unlit highways as against well lit thoroughfares in far off offices and Delhi. Nothing wrong in trying out.
I began walking towards Rajasthan side. Due to darkness on a moonless night, I was a bit apprehensive. Plus worried about the possibility of getting mugged on the highway. Abruptly I turned back after 20 minutes. May be a kilometer away from truck parking lot I could have walked.
One more try at the cabin door in vain.
Suddenly I noticed a concrete bus shelter on the other side of the road. I crossed over and found just only one person sleeping in the spacious shelter on the rised platform. It was neat and clean. That person was also snoring. I don’t care a fig. All I need a place to give space for my back on a solid surface and shut my eyes for a while. Spreading the gamcha (a soft and light towel, usually worn by drivers) on the rised platform, I grabbed Dame Sleep.
I woke up when some voices were heard. I got up to notice the person who was asleep when I entered this bus shelter was wearing his Nike shoes and ready to go with someone who had come to pick him up. The day has broken out. There was a lot of sunlight. Maybe I slept for over an hour.
I got up and crossed the highway. That’s when I saw Raju was climbing down from the roof of our carrier. I did not narrate my predicament to him and look silly in his eyes. Deftly he opened the cabin door. My foot! I could not do that.
By then, Driver Vikram who was sleeping in the upper berth inside cabin also got up and we marched towards the dhaba for the morning cuppa.
The previous night, I slept under the open sky in Vikram’s village on the hills. Tonight it was in a bus shelter. What next? I had no idea. But I was game and adventurous enough.
Honestly, the next two nights were spent in an airconditioned 3-star Hotel Rama Residence in Anand, hardly a kilometer away from the world famous Amul plant is situated.
It was fate. Just go with the wind is what I learnt.
What more is in store over the next few weeks before I return home, I have no idea. No fear as well.

ROADTRIP: @ Bhim, Rajasthan


The only Bhim I knew until recently was the Mahabharat character, renowned for his muscle power and his unending appetise for food. Not to forget the glorious fight with his cousin Duryodhan in the epic battle of Kurukshetra in the climax. All this changed when the 38 year old Driver Vikram Singh permitted me to travel on his Mercurio Pallia car carrier from Gurgaon to Bangalore. A few hundred kilometers from Gurgaon, Haryana, he said he would like to halt at Bhim, a village nestled among the hills nearly 100 km away from the Islamic shrine Ajmer. It is where his ‘parivar’ (family) lives for several generations. That is when I became aware of the existence of such a village named after the Mahabharat character.

It took us 20 minutes on a sardine-packed general purpose vehicle (Geep) from National Highway 8 linking Delhi with Bombay via Jaipur and Baroda to reach Thaneda hamlet in Bhim. With Raju Singh, Vikram’s younger brother and a co-driver, in tow, we walked half a kilometer through the hilly terrain with plains in between where locals grow wheat, pulses, vegetables, lemon etc. whenever possible. Water is a scarce commodity given the desert conditions in Rajasthan.

Sriram Singh, in his sixties, greets as we enter his world. Three rows of houses – made out of sliced rocky mountain slabs. He and his huge family – five sons of whom four are married (through child marriage), their respective wives and the clutch of children in various age groups. Each one of them come and greet me in typical Rajasthani fashion. Besides his family, the patriarch has over 30 goats, half a dozen cows and bulls.
He is a BPL (below poverty line) card holder and thus eligible for electricity which lights up his house with two low voltage bulbs at night as and when power supply is available. Nobody is bothered about absence of power. There is no TV. No radio. But there are mobile phones aplenty through which they hear filmy songs.
Tea is made from goat milk only. As and when they want tea to be served, one of the family members approach their flock and get it on the spot! The flock is healthy. It is bound to be because Singh senior, shepherds them daily for a minimum of 5-6 hours in the neighbourhood. There is a thick forest cover just over the mountain that boasts of all kinds of wild animals. He he had met many panthers, wild bulls and what not. Luckily no harm had befallen him.
Children go to the nearby school which boasts of 300 students from primary to eighth class but has only three teachers! For higher secondary education, children travel down to Bhim town. But most of them give up education midway because they cannot cope with no proper coaching at school or at home. Either they take to farming or do small chores. Some become drivers – like in the case of Vikram. Three among his five brothers are working as drivers of heavy commercial vehicles.

Though the parivar is vegetarian, the driver-sons have taken to non-vegetarian. They cook their stuff in separate vessels, eat and wash them on their own. There are no grudges.

Though hilly terrain, the family has a backyard well and with the help of motor, they are able to irrigate their farms. Vikram and his second brother Soham have got their pucca houses (2 rooms each) already. Raju is hopeful that his would be ready once he makes money out of drivery.

Vikram buys his family’s grain needs form various parts of India during his sojourn and brings them home during his twice a month visit to base. His route plan ensures that he crosses Bhim twice a month definitely. Just a day in between pick up and delivery, he completes his duty to his family.

Interestingly there is a road built under Prime Minister Sadak Yojana that ends just behind his house. This stretch of say 2 kilometres is a boon because a neighbor who has a tempo helps him cart his family requirements from NH8 whenever required.

Interestingly, the private tempos insist of additional Rs.100 to cover this uneven PM Sadak. If you don’t want to shell out that extra, then walk down half a kilometer with a heavy load through the ups and down of the hilly region.

After a long time, I slept in the open on a cot watching stars on a dark, moonless night. It was a pleasure, no doubt.

But there was a downside to this unique experience. Wild insect bite during the night under the whisky induced undisturbed slumber has created rashes all over my body leading to a sudden halt at Halol to go for medicare. No regrets. I will never forget Bhim. Thank you, Singh parivar!

ROADTRIP: Neemrana Japanese Zone


The government of Rajasthan has been lucky and clever enough to cash in on its proximity to NCR: read Gurgaon in the neighbouring Haryana. Over three decades ago when India’s people car “Maruti Suzuki” set up tent in Gurgaon, it led to the industrialization of the predominantly agrarian north Indian state. Over the years, the stupendous growth of India’s number one passenger car manufacturer has led to the mushrooming growth of autocomponent manufacturers in Gurgaon and beyond. With Maruti expanding to put up another huge plant at Manesar , fresh vendors sensed an opportunity to set up shops in Bawal as well. Unforutnately for Haryana, its border ended at Bawal.

That is perhaps what might have led the rulers of neighbouring Rajasthan state to dream about a huge industrial estate on modern lines. Not haphazard growth for them, may be. Presto, comes up Neemrana Japanese Zone. I heard about him NJZ through a casual conversation with Nippon Express (3PL players) executives at the recently held India Warehouse Show. Until then, Neemrana meant the heritage hotel and nothing else for me.

As my truck passed through Neerama, my camera began clicking the upcoming NJZ. It is still early days. With Japanese settling down in their typical businesslike fashion, this region is going to witness a huge industrial base. I look forward to spending sometime in the near future.

Japanese companies are media shy. With Rajasthan Industrial Investment Corporation (RIICO) supporting this initiative, it wil be a perfect showcase for them to boast of their state as industry-friendly as the neighbouring Harayana in the north and Gujarat in the south. I luv it! Pardon, McDee for coining your trademark slogan!

ROADTRIP: @ Daruhera


Some people leave indelible impressions on you forever. Deepak Shandilya was one such gent. He is in his late twenties and operates out of Dharuhera office of M.R.S. Parivahan Private Limited. This tilak sporting Haryanvi manages the logistics of transporting Hero Honda two-wheelers from Dharuhera plant to the entire Gujarat. Besides Hero Honda, his company is the north India distributor for Neel Kamal bins, pallets etc.

What is so special about him and why I claim he left an “indelible impression”? Good question. Last week, I ran into his parking lot on the National Highway 8 where my Driver Vikram Singh’s younger brother Sohan Singh works. It was a family reunion for Vikram and his two brothers. Raju works as co-driver with Vikram. They only meet on highways, which is a common characteristics of driving community giving their work nature. Even family functions do not bring them together. For instance, Vikram’s nephew – his elder sister’s son is getting married this month and Vikram and Raju won’t be present due to their work pressure.

Coming back to Deepak, Sohan Singh is one of his blue eyed drivers. During the casual chat, Sohan spoke about his chota malik. He said had Deepak been in town, he could have arranged a meeting with him for me. He was unsure whether Deepak would turn up before we leave. We had tea together and left. Hardly we crossed three kilometers before Vikram’s mobile phone began to ring. It was Sohan on line and he said Deepak had come to office and he (Deepak) wanted to meet me. Vikram said he would not be able to turn the truck and return. Then Sohan said, Deepak is sending his car to pick us up wherever we were on the highway and return us to our truck after the meeting. Unique for me.

Vikram halted the truck on the side without blocking the highway and soon an airconditioned car arrived and we boarded the same to return to M.R.S. Parivahan office. The young scion greeted us and took me to his tiny office room. Lean, but energetic handshake gave an idea of his prowess. He spoke in detail about his business. What does M.R.S. stand for? Mohindra Road Sushil. His father has given the charge of running the business to Deepak and the Kaushik brothers. Sushil Kaushik is a director of the company operates out of Vapi while his younger sibling manages from Jammu where Neel Kamal has a manufacturing facility. Deepak, affectionately called “BUnty” by his family and friends, manages to send 5-6 trucks carrying Hero Honda vehicles: either in 55 or 65 or 78 capacity carriers. Come back on your return to Delhi and we will sit and talk is what he told as we bid goodbye and departed. See you soon, Deepak! God be with you.

Sunday, 17 April 2011

KSRTC passenger fare hike



Suchith Kidiyoor

Travelling in Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) buses is becoming more expensive with each passing year. For a change, fuel prices are not to blame. Instead, toll charges are the cause.

With new toll roads coming up in various parts of the state and outside, KSRTC has been forced to hike ticket prices. The KSRTC operates 7,011 services to various destinations in the state and outside. Officials say their buses pay toll at over 40 places.

K A Rajkumar, director (operations), says, “The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) is not willing to exempt our buses from toll. We are paying toll on almost all busy highways and the amount adds up to a substantial sum.

“For example, on the Bangalore-Mumbai route, KSRTC buses pay toll at more than six points. Hence, we are adding toll charges to the ticket fare.”

On the Bangalore-Mumbai route, the toll works out to Rs 10 per passenger. On the Chennai route, each passenger shells out Rs 6 as toll charge.

An NHAI official said, “Though state transport undertakings have requested exemption from toll for their vehicles, we can't oblige. They do not fall under the category of non-commercial vehicles.”

The latest addition to the toll list is Chikballapur road.

Rajkumar said, “We operate around 300 buses on Chikballapur road. The major destinations are Chikkaballapur, Hyderabad, Bellary and Puttaparthi. If our buses have to pay toll, we are certainly going to increase the fare.”

If NHAI collects Rs 60 for the 22 km stretch, ticket prices may be hiked by up to Rs 2 per passenger.

Source: Bangalore Mirror

Friday, 15 April 2011

DTC Bus Ride-5



DL 1P - C 9791 is a brand new low-floor Tata Macropolo.

Was travelling from Mehrauli to Saket recently under Route No. 427 plying to Hazarat Nizamuddin Railway Station Terminus.

The non-a/c bus was naturally crowded because it was peak time.

I noticed two handbills stuck inside the bus just near the front door.

No, it was not a DTC notice, but a private one inviting prospective candidates to call up a particular mobile number for a suitable job in hoteliering.

Another handbill of the same "illegal advertiser" was pasted bang opposite the rear door. No passenger can miss it.

Definitely DTC officials have noticed this "illegal presence" of billboard. It appeared that some effort has been taken to "disfigure" - is that the right word? - and partly succeeded with the front door one.

I wonder whether "official action" initiated against the advertiser. If yes, I would like to know.

It is no secret who the advertiser is. It ought to be the advertiser himself/herself. Why should anyone else take the trouble of printing and pasting inside public transport?

The mobile number of the advertiser is printed boldly and legibly.

Catching up with him/her ought not to pose any challenges.

The financially weak DTC should look at enhancing its revenue by leasing out space to advertisers inside DTC buses - like they do in Delhi Metro. Not a bad idea.

With such a huge fleet, the reach is phenomenal. Why not?

Any tresspasser should be brought to book and imposed a heavy penalty.

Any takers?