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Right to Safe Road Travel is Part of the Right to Life- Supreme Court

Right to Safe Road Travel: Supreme Court's Landmark Highway Safety Directions | PRAN Foundation
PRAN Foundation | Policy Research & Public Interest Law
Road Safety & Constitutional Rights

Right to Safe Road Travel is
Part of the Right to Life

The Supreme Court of India, in In Re: Phalodi Accident, has issued sweeping directions to make India's national highways safer — grounding road safety firmly within the Article 21 guarantee of life and liberty.

Date: April 18, 2026 Bench: Justices JK Maheshwari & AS Chandurkar Case: In Re: Phalodi Accident (Suo Motu) Category: PIL | Road Safety | Constitutional Law

A Judgment Born from Tragedy

Two devastating road accidents in November 2025 — one in Phalodi district, Rajasthan, and another in Rangareddy district, Telangana — together claimed 34 precious lives. The Supreme Court took suo motu cognisance of these tragedies and, months later, has delivered a judgment that goes far beyond condolence. It delivers accountability.

The order in In Re: Phalodi Accident, passed by a bench of Justice JK Maheshwari and Justice AS Chandurkar, is a landmark affirmation: the State's obligation to protect life does not end at preventing unlawful killing. It extends to creating and maintaining a safe environment where every citizen — truck driver, bus passenger, pedestrian — can travel without facing avoidable peril.

"The Right to Life enshrined under Article 21 is not merely a guarantee against the unlawful taking of life, but a positive mandate upon the State to ensure a safe environment where human life is preserved and valued."

— Supreme Court of India, In Re: Phalodi Accident (2026)

India's Highway Safety Crisis: The Numbers

The Court's order rests on a chilling statistic that should jolt every policymaker, administrator, and citizen into action:

2% National Highways as share of India's total road network
30% Of all road fatalities occur on National Highways
34 Lives lost in the two accidents that triggered this suo motu case
75 km Maximum interval for emergency response deployment now mandated

These numbers reveal a structural failure. National highways are arterial roads carrying the heaviest traffic loads, built for speed — yet they have become what the Court rightly called "corridors of peril due to administrative negligence." Illegal encroachments, dark stretches, trucks parked dangerously on carriageways, absent emergency services — all of these are not accidents of geography. They are failures of governance.

The Constitutional Foundation: Article 21 and the State's Positive Duty

What makes this judgment constitutionally significant is its expansive reading of Article 21. The right to life, the Court holds, is not merely a negative right — a shield against arbitrary state action. It carries within it a positive mandate: the State must actively ensure conditions in which life can be safely lived.

This is not a novel principle — the Supreme Court has over decades read Article 21 expansively to encompass the right to livelihood, health, education, and a clean environment. Indeed, as recently as October 2025, the Supreme Court in S. Rajaseekaran v. Union of India issued comprehensive directions on pedestrian safety and mandated states to frame road safety rules — a judgment we analysed in depth on this platform. The Phalodi Accident order now builds powerfully on that foundation.

PRAN's Perspective

This judgment aligns squarely with PRAN Foundation's advocacy posture: that constitutional rights are not abstract declarations but enforceable entitlements that must translate into administrative action on the ground. Whether it is consumer protection, amusement ride safety under our #SafeSwingsSafeSmiles campaign, or now highway safety — the constitutional framework already provides the tools. What is needed is the will to use them.

The Court further emphasised that financial or administrative constraints cannot serve as excuses:

"No pecuniary or administrative constraint can outweigh the sanctity of human life."

— Supreme Court of India, In Re: Phalodi Accident (2026)

This principle is a direct rebuke to the bureaucratic tendency to treat road safety expenditure as discretionary. It is not. It is a constitutional obligation.

The Thirteen Directions: A Blueprint for Highway Safety

Senior Advocate Atmaram Nadkarni was appointed as Amicus Curiae, assisted by Advocates Jai Anant Dehardrai and Sughosh Subramanyam, to identify systemic gaps. Their suggestions, placed jointly before the Court by the Amicus and Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, formed the basis of thirteen binding interim directions:

1
Ban on Highway Parking Heavy and commercial vehicles are prohibited from parking on National Highway carriageways or paved shoulders, except at designated bays or lay-bys.
2
Removal of Encroachments (60-Day Deadline) All unauthorised dhabas, eateries, and commercial structures within highway right-of-way areas must be removed within 60 days of the order.
3
No Licences Without Highway Clearance Authorities shall not grant or renew licences or trade approvals within highway safety zones without prior approval from the relevant highway authority.
4
District Highway Safety Task Forces District Magistrates must constitute dedicated task forces in every district through which a National Highway passes.
5
Dedicated Patrolling Teams State Police and transport departments must deploy continuous highway surveillance teams for round-the-clock patrolling.
6
Accident Blackspot Identification (45-Day Deadline) Authorities must identify and publish accident-prone locations within 45 days and install adequate lighting, signage, and speed enforcement systems at those points.
7
Emergency Response Deployment Ambulances and recovery cranes must be stationed at intervals not exceeding 75 kilometres along National Highways.
8
Truck Lay-Bye Facilities Safe parking and rest facilities for trucks must be developed at regular intervals, eliminating the need for dangerous shoulder parking.
9
Wayside Amenities Mandatory facilities including rest areas, washrooms, food services, and first-aid stations must be established at designated locations on National Highways.
10
Technology-Based Monitoring Surveillance cameras, speed detectors, and emergency call boxes must be operationalised across National Highways for real-time monitoring.
11
Public Grievance Mechanisms Toll-free helplines and digital complaint systems must be operationalised for the public to report encroachments, hazardous conditions, and safety lapses.
12
Inter-State Coordination Mechanism The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways must establish an inter-state coordination framework to standardise enforcement practices across state boundaries.
13
Compliance Reporting (75-Day Deadline) All implementing agencies must submit consolidated compliance reports within 75 days. The Court will hear the matter again after two months to assess compliance.

The order further directs that copies be circulated to Chief Secretaries and Directors General of Police of all States and Union Territories for immediate implementation — ensuring that the mandate reaches the highest executive echelons of every state government.

Why This Judgment Matters: Four Key Takeaways

1. Road Safety is Now a Fundamental Rights Issue

By grounding these directions in Article 21, the Court has elevated highway safety from a policy preference to a constitutional imperative. This means citizens have a legally enforceable right to demand action — through RTI, consumer forums, High Courts, and the Supreme Court itself.

2. State Governments Cannot Plead Helplessness

The explicit rejection of financial and administrative constraints as valid excuses strips state governments of their most common shield. Budgetary allocations for highway safety infrastructure are no longer merely desirable — they are constitutionally mandated. This echoes the Bombay High Court's strong message in a related context: the ₹6 lakh pothole liability ruling which held civic authorities directly accountable for defective road surfaces — a case PRAN has previously covered and commended.

3. Local Governance is Central to Enforcement

The direction to constitute District Highway Safety Task Forces under District Magistrates is a recognition that effective road safety cannot be managed from Delhi alone. It must be owned and executed at the district level. This decentralised accountability framework, if implemented faithfully, could transform on-ground reality.

4. Citizens Now Have a Grievance Pathway

The direction to operationalise toll-free helplines and digital complaint mechanisms gives ordinary road users — truck drivers, bus passengers, local communities — a formal channel to flag hazards. This citizen participation element is a progressive feature that can sustain the Court's directions beyond the two-month review cycle. Citizens who have suffered injury in road accidents should also be aware of their existing legal remedies: the Compensation to Victims of Hit and Run Motor Accidents Scheme, 2022 under Section 161 of the Motor Vehicles Act — which PRAN has previously explained in detail — already guarantees fixed compensation even when the offending vehicle is untraced.

The Road Ahead: From Directions to Reality

India's road fatality crisis is well-documented and chronic. Over 1.7 lakh people die on Indian roads every year — more than in any other country. Decades of policy frameworks, Five-Year Plan commitments, and international agreements have not moved the needle sufficiently. Even legislative reform — such as the Jan Vishwas Amendment Bill's proposed changes to the Motor Vehicles Act, which PRAN has analysed — while welcome, cannot substitute for enforcement and institutional accountability. What has often been missing is accountability with teeth.

This judgment provides precisely that. The 45-day, 60-day, and 75-day compliance deadlines, backed by the Supreme Court's supervisory jurisdiction, create a framework of judicial oversight that is harder to ignore than administrative circulars.

But judgments are not self-executing. The real challenge lies in the weeks and months ahead:

  • Will District Magistrates constitute task forces within the stipulated time, or will this become another compliance-on-paper exercise?
  • Will NHAI and state highway departments identify and publish blackspot data transparently?
  • Will the inter-state coordination mechanism be a genuine platform or a bureaucratic committee?
  • Will the public grievance helplines be staffed and responsive, or just nominally activated?

Monitoring these questions is where civil society, media, legal practitioners, and organisations like PRAN Foundation have a vital role to play.

PRAN Foundation's Road Safety Commitment

PRAN Foundation is committed to tracking the implementation of this judgment. Through our Legal Aid Network spanning six states, our grassroots Gram Shakti Kendra initiative, and our policy research work, we will monitor compliance, support affected communities in accessing the new grievance mechanisms, and bring systemic violations to the notice of appropriate forums.

Road safety is not a sectoral issue — it intersects with the right to health, workers' rights, the rights of rural communities living alongside highways, and the right to an effective remedy. We stand ready to act on all of these fronts.

Conclusion: Every Life Counts

The thirty-four families who lost their loved ones on those dark November nights in Phalodi and Rangareddy did not expect the Supreme Court to transform their grief into a constitutional landmark. Yet that is precisely what has happened. Their loss has become a mandate for an entire nation to take road safety seriously — not as a matter of statistics, but as a matter of constitutional duty.

The Court's words deserve to echo in every District Magistrate's office, every highway authority board room, and every state cabinet meeting: the loss of even a single life to avoidable hazards reflects a breakdown of the State's protective responsibility.

India's highways must not be corridors of peril. They must be corridors of life.

PRAN Foundation — Public Interest in Action

PRAN (Policy Research Action Network) Foundation works at the intersection of law, policy, and grassroots advocacy to advance the constitutional rights of every Indian. If you have experienced a road safety hazard on a National Highway, or wish to support our monitoring work on this judgment, reach out to us.

#RightToLife #HighwaySafety #Article21 #SupremeCourt #PublicInterestLaw #PRANFoundation #RoadSafetyIndia
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