Updated On: 02 January, 2024 04:18 AM IST | Mumbai | Shirish Vaktania
As drivers clash with police during protests against new 10-year jail term for hit-and-run cases, experts say such stringent punishment is required to ensure road safety improves

A man takes aside a tyre set on fire by protesters on the highway near Santosh Bhavan, Nalasopara, on Monday
The new legislation, Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023, having an increased punishment for hit-and-run cases, has triggered nationwide protests by truckers who have jammed highways and important junctions demanding that the law be repealed. However, legal experts have welcomed the legislation saying that the deterrent punishment provided under Section 104 will force errant truck drivers to follow traffic rules and prevent fatal accidents on highways. In a bid to strongly press their demands, protesting truckers pelted stones at policemen at various locations in Navi Mumbai and Palghar, where they jammed arterial check nakas on highways.
After an overnight bandobast duty for New Year, police in Navi Mumbai, Palghar and Mira Bhayandar Vasai Virar had to focus their energy on the roads on the first day of 2024.