
Bengaluru: Seized Buses Signal Wake-Up: Bengaluru’s Road Reckoning
The echoes of the deadly Kurnool bus fire on October 24, 2025, which claimed 19 lives when a Hyderabad-Bengaluru sleeper coach burst into flames after hitting a motorcycle, have rippled into Karnataka. Transport officials in Bengaluru responded with lightning raids on Friday, targeting private buses to root out safety lapses before they turn deadly.
This swift crackdown, led by Additional Commissioner Onkareshwari, underscores a growing unease among commuters who rely on these overnight hauls for work and family ties.
Raids Target Out-of-State Operators
Teams zeroed in on buses registered in Tamil Nadu, Arunachal Pradesh, and Nagaland, often flagged for skirting local regulations. Early morning sweeps caught operators off guard, with checks extending from city outskirts to key entry points.
At the Attibele checkpost near Electronic City, inspectors halted several all-India tourist coaches, scrutinizing everything from permits to emergency exits. The focus was clear: no more chances on the roads that connect lives across borders.
Operators grumbled about the timing, but families touched by the Kurnool tragedy see it as overdue accountability.
Violations Lead to Impoundments
Thirty buses fell short of standards, prompting immediate seizures that left depots scrambling. Many operated on expired permits, a common shortcut in the cutthroat travel trade.
- Fire extinguishers missing or outdated in half the cases.
- Overcrowding and faulty brakes flagged in others.
- No valid insurance or route approvals on several vehicles.
Commissioner Onkareshwari confirmed the actions in a briefing, noting that RTO officers and brake inspectors joined the fray to ensure thorough vetting.
A Broader Push for Safer Journeys
These raids form part of a nationwide ripple effect from the Kurnool horror, where jammed doors trapped passengers in sleep. Karnataka’s transport wing vows continued vigilance, blending enforcement with calls for better training and vehicle audits.
Commuters boarding Friday’s buses shared relieved nods, yet the seizures hint at deeper issues in India’s bustling bus networks. Will this spark lasting change, or fade like exhaust in the wind?
