
The sound came first. A loud, sickening crunch that made tea stall customers near Jahangirpura look up from their cups. Then the screech of metal stopping suddenly. Then silence, followed by voices.
On March 2, 2026, a private tempo crashed into a BRTS bus inside Surat’s dedicated rapid transit corridor. The bus was heading toward Althan on its scheduled route. The tempo, according to witnesses, had no business being there.
What Happened at Jahangirpura
The collision happened on the BRTS lane itself – a route strictly reserved for public transport vehicles. Private tempos, cars, two-wheelers? Not allowed. Never allowed.
Yet there it was.
Preliminary reports suggest the tempo may have been traveling at speed. Possibly on the wrong side. Possibly trying to cut through traffic. The result was a head-on impact that shattered the bus’s front windshield and caved in its front section.
| Vehicle | Damage | Occupants |
| BRTS Bus | Heavy front damage, windshield shattered | Passengers safe, minor shock reported |
| Private Tempo | Significant impact damage | Details awaited |
Miraculously, no major casualties were reported. Passengers inside the bus walked away shaken but unhurt. The tempo driver’s condition is still being assessed.
The Scene After Impact
If you’ve ever seen a BRTS bus up close, you know they’re built solid. Heavy. Reinforced. The fact that a tempo managed to cause this much damage says something about the force involved.
Local residents who reached the spot described broken glass across the lane, passengers standing dazed on the roadside, and the tempo’s front end crumpled like paper.
One passenger, still standing near the bus minutes after the crash, told bystanders: “Achanak se awaaz aayi. Samajh nahi aaya kya hua.” (Suddenly there was a sound. Didn’t understand what happened.)
The Bigger Problem: BRTS Lane Misuse
This incident didn’t happen on a regular road. It happened inside a corridor that’s supposed to be off-limits to private vehicles.
Yet anyone who drives in Surat knows the truth. Two-wheelers sneak in during peak hours. Autos take shortcuts. Private vehicles treat the BRTS lane as an express lane when traffic slows elsewhere.
The numbers back this up. Past traffic records show over 100 fatalities on Surat’s BRTS routes over several years. Unauthorized entry. Speeding. Both factors, again and again.
What Authorities Have Said (And What’s Been Done)
The Surat Municipal Corporation has talked about solutions before.
| Proposed Measure | Status |
| Automated swing gates at entry points | Discussed, not fully implemented |
| CCTV surveillance | Present, but violations continue |
| Increased traffic monitoring | Inconsistent enforcement |
| Strict penalties for violators | Fines exist, but deterrence weak |
After every major incident, the conversation restarts. Physical barriers. Better enforcement. Heavier fines. Then time passes, and the lanes fill with unauthorized vehicles again.
This accident will restart that conversation once more.
What Citizens Should Know
If you drive in Surat, the rules are simple:
- BRTS lanes are for BRTS buses only. Not cars. Not tempos. Not two-wheelers.
- Entry is prohibited. Not suggested. Not optional. Prohibited.
- Signs are posted. Markings are clear. Ignoring them isn’t ignorance – it’s violation.
If you see unauthorized vehicles in BRTS lanes, report them through official civic platforms. It might feel like small action, but small actions add up.
What Happens Next
The tempo driver, if found at fault, faces legal action. The bus will be repaired or replaced. Passengers will continue their journeys. Life in Surat returns to normal.
But another accident has happened. Another reminder that dedicated lanes only work when they’re respected.
Until enforcement matches the seriousness of the risk, Jahangirpura won’t be the last location on this list.