Vadodara Bridge Collapse: Activists Allege Ignored Warnings on Safety Risks

IO_AdminAfrica6 hours ago4 Views

Quick Summary:

  • Event: A section of the Gambhira bridge over Mahisagar river collapsed in Padra taluk, Vadodara district, Gujarat on July 9, 2025. At least 16 people were killed after vehicles fell into the river.
  • Warnings Ignored: Social activists, opposition leaders, adn residents allege repeated warnings since August 2022 regarding the bridge’s “dangerous condition” were ignored by authorities.

– Activist Lakhan darbar revealed an R&B officer admitted in a recorded conversation that the structure might fail soon after an adverse private consultant survey flagged concerns. However, no notable action was taken to repair or shut down the bridge.- District panchayat member Harshadsinh Parmar filed complaints but received no response from departments concerned.

  • Collapse Details: On Wednesday morning (7:30 a.m.), approximately a 10 to15-meter-long slab of this four-decade-old key connector between central Gujarat and Saurashtra gave way under heavy traffic.
  • Official Statements:

– Lakhan Darbar called out negligence for keeping it operational despite warnings as 2022.
– Nainish Naykawala (Executive Engineer of R&B department) claimed inspections did not find major structural faults and pointed out repairs done last year as sufficient measures.

  • Political Backlash: Strong criticism emerged from Opposition leaders accusing BJP rule of neglecting infrastructure safety for decades:

– Former CM shankersinh Vaghela blamed “30 years misrule”.
– Congress demanded judicial investigation; AAP called it “a human-made disaster.”

Images related to rescue operations and political reactions accompany the report.


Indian Opinion Analysis:
The Gambhira bridge collapse highlights critical lapses in infrastructure management-a long-standing area needing attention across India’s states as aging structures face greater risks amid increasing usage demands. Despite residents’ efforts to alert authorities as early as August 2022 through written complaints and conversations with officials acknowledging risks internally, actionable responses such as closing or strengthening the structure lagged.

This case raises broader concerns about systemic accountability: reliance on internal surveys appears insufficient if outcomes fail to stop risky usage despite evident threats flagged at multiple levels-potentially risking public safety further when basic maintenance isn’t prioritized uniformly nationwide.

The political fallout is significant but predictable given India’s electoral narratives leaning heavily into governance critiques during crises like these; more constructive would be improving cross-party consensus emphasizing safer proactive measures toward aging infrastructural health transparently beyond immediate blame cycles ensuring readiness tackling overlooked gaps scaling preventative systematic foundations better designed national solutions mitigating similar future collapses preventing tragic cumulative frequent repeats proportionately enduring readjustments failures ahead

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