header banner
SOCIETY

CC camera getting effective: 9,000 drivers face actions in a year

KATHMANDU, Aug 19: The Traffic Police have taken actions against drivers of 8,939 vehicles for breaching traffic rules with the help of CC camera.
By RSS

KATHMANDU, Aug 19: The Traffic Police have taken actions against drivers of 8,939 vehicles for breaching traffic rules with the help of CC camera.


In the fiscal year 2075/76, the Metropolitan Traffic Police Division held the drivers violating traffic rules in different parts of Kathmandu Valley acting on CC camera footage.


Related story

159 people face action for driving under the influence of drugs


Action was taken against 5,314 drivers through traffic teams mobilized on the roads from the control room of Ranipokhari traffic office while 1,997 faced music with the help of its CC camera footage. Likewise, 1,069 were slapped actions through surveillance vehicle and other cameras.


Basanta Pant, metropolitan traffic police chief and Senior Superintendant of Police (SSP) said the CC camera was instrumental in their job to take actions against the traffic rule violators.


"CC camera has been very useful in ending the tendency of violating traffic rules in physical absence of traffic police", he said.


Valley Traffic Police have been using CC camera to check rampant traffic violation since January 2017.


The Division has also devised other instruments such as dash board camera, Gropo camera and body own camera to that end.

Related Stories
The Week

The many kinds of meditation

WORLD

Low snow on the Himalayas threatens water security...

WORLD

British prime minister sets July 4 election as his...

ECONOMY

NPC launches public investment management action p...

SOCIETY

31st World Press Freedom Day being observed today

Trending

Top Videos

Bold Preety willing to fight for her musical career

Awareness among people on heart diseases has improved in Nepal’

Print still remains the numbers of one platform

Bringing home a gold medal is on my bucket

What is Nepal's roadmap to sage child rights