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After Accident In Mumbai`s Kurla, Video Of BEST Drivers Buying, Hiding Alcohol In Buses Goes Viral
Videos of drivers of wet-leased buses in Brihanmumbai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) undertaking`s fleet allegedly buying or drinking alcohol have gone viral on social media.
Following the horrific accident in which a wet-leased electric bus of the civic-run transporter plowed into vehicles and people in Mumbai’s Kurla West, videos of drivers of wet-leased buses in Brihanmumbai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) undertaking’s fleet allegedly buying or drinking alcohol have gone viral on social media.
These videos are in circulation after the horrific December 9 accident, which claimed the lives of seven people and left 42 others injured. A senior BEST official said they have come across four such purported videos this week.
In one of the videos, a driver is seen consuming alcohol while sitting at the wheel and being questioned by a security officer, as reported by news agency PTI. The video is apparently from the Mulund depot and took place on election day.
“The driver was immediately sacked. We have also received three other videos in which drivers are seen stopping their buses by the road, buying alcohol, and coming back to their seats,” the official said, as quoted by PTI.
Two of these videos are from Bandra East and Andheri, while the location of the third is unclear. The Bandra East video was apparently shot on December 11, two days after the Kurla West accident, sources said.
It was, however, not immediately known what action BEST authorities took against the drivers seen in these videos. In a press conference, BEST Kamgar Sena president Suhas Samant said these videos are tarnishing the image of the transporter and its staffers.
“Unlike wet-leased bus drivers, BEST employees are bound by standing orders and service regulations. Hence, they won’t dare to stop buses anywhere on the road and get down to buy alcohol,” Samant claimed.
Speaking to PTI on Wednesday, Anilkumar Diggikar, general manager, said a meeting was held with operators of wet-lease buses, and it was decided to make breathalyzers mandatory apart from other steps to curb accidents.
(With PTI Inputs)