Movement police in Nepal have announced a war on high-decibel sounding, punishing blundering drivers and seizing more than 1,000 deafening horns that have made life agonizing on regularly gridlocked roads.
In a country where drivers tend to sound as effectively – and continually – as they inhale, police propelled a drive not long ago to tame the noisemakers, accusing vehicles of blasting horns fines of up to 5,000 Nepali rupees ($53).
Eliminated commotion contamination
Police likewise seized more than 1,000 boisterous horns in the previous week in an offer to chop down the clamor contamination in the city of the capital, said Kathmandu Metropolitan Traffic Police representative Pawan Giri.
"Such vehicles have brought on mishaps as people on foot, occupied by the bedlam of blasting horns, chance upon each other and the passing activity," Giri told AFP.
Some maverick drivers have gone so far as to supplant their vehicles' unique, nearly stifled, horns with noisier advanced horns, Giri said.
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