Peril Above the Pavement: Safety Lapses at Hyderabad Flyover Site Spark Public Outcry
Social media footage of workers operating without safety harnesses on the Chanchalguda-Santoshnagar flyover in Hyderabad has sparked a public outcry over construction negligence. As the 2.5-km GHMC project nears completion after years of delays, the lack of protective gear and traffic cordons highlights a systemic safety crisis in India’s urban infrastructure development.
The viral clips illustrate a systemic failure to implement basic safety protocols, showing workers balanced on narrow steel structures while vehicles ply directly beneath them. This lack of a safety perimeter or overhead protection evokes chilling parallels to a recent tragedy in Mumbai, where a 23-year-old man was severely injured by a falling iron rod at a similar construction site. Despite the project being under development for four years and suffering from chronic delays, the urgency to finish appears to have superseded the mandatory implementation of the Building and Other Construction Workers (BOCW) Act standards.
Public reaction has been swift and unforgiving, with digital platforms flooded with calls for the immediate suspension of work until stringent safety measures are enforced. Beyond the immediate physical risk to the laborers, the outcry has shifted toward the administrative and legal responsibilities of the contractors and oversight officials. There are growing demands for mandatory worker insurance, the installation of safety barricades, and the deployment of marshals to manage traffic during high-risk maneuvers. The silence from the GHMC and relevant state authorities in the wake of these revelations has only intensified the pressure, leaving a vacuum of accountability as the project enters its final, most critical phase.
The situation in Hyderabad is a microcosm of a much larger national crisis; India currently grapples with a construction safety record that sees over 1,000 deaths annually due to falls alone. As the Chanchalguda-Santoshnagar flyover moves toward its eventual inauguration, the controversy serves as a stark reminder that infrastructure progress cannot be measured solely by concrete and steel. Without a fundamental shift in how safety is regulated and enforced, these "monuments of development" will continue to be built at an unacceptably high human cost, highlighting a desperate need for a culture of safety that protects both the hands that build the city and the public that moves beneath it.

Comment List