In Kathmandu, the country’s top film and TV star giving lecture to the traffic police that how to show patience which help them control their anger when faced with turmoil on the roads.
The senior traffic officials think that the training will help remain ease while under pressure in the city's crowded areas. Many Nepal’s citizens criticize that traffic police are impolite and immoderate. The training is part of a line set to help police control drivers.
Bigyan Raj Sharma, deputy inspector general of traffic police, said, we are very much perturbed over the manners of our staff. Some of our staff members require improving the method they act," he said, adding that our stars had without cost to assist them in the week-duration course.
Mr. Sharma said we wish our traffic police to think how people suffer and that's what they're educating us. The course also includes gathering student and civil society leaders.
While various people still outlook the old city of Kathmandu as a supernatural Shangri-la in the Himalayas, the modern certainty of life in Nepal's capital is far away from passive. Over capacity and poor infrastructure has bowed this once calm city into a loud and disorganized citizen loll.
Innermost to this is the city's severely preserve road system utilized by at least five hundred thousand vehicles, many of them old, polluting and defective.
Various citizens of Nepal drive without adequate training – over looking lanes, road signs and road regulations. The city's 800 traffic police patrol every main link, as traffic lights do not working properly because of regular power cuts.
Few weeks back, they have stepped up their patrols in an effort to reduce the nonstop traffic hurdles that plague the capital.
Inspector Sharma, our city is more or less at a decline, "All in sundry in a rush and nobody follows to the law," he said.


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