As many as 3.92 lakh lives have been lost in three years, according to the data. (File photo)NewDelhi: India recorded 1.20 lakh cases of “deaths due to negligence relating to road accidents” in 2020 — 328 people losing their lives every day on an average — despite COVID-19 lockdowns, according to government data.As many as 3.92 lakh lives have been lost in three years in deaths due to negligence related to road accidents, the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) revealed in its annual ‘Crime India’ report for 2020.While 1.20 lakh such deaths were recorded in 2020, the figures stood at 1.36 lakh in 2019 and 1.35 lakh in 2018, the data showed.The country also logged 1.35 lakh cases of “hit and run” since 2018, the report of the NCRB, which functions under the Union Home Ministry, showed.In 2020 alone, there were 41,196 cases of “hit and run” while there were 47,504 such cases in 2019 and 47,028 in 2018, the report showed.On an average, there were 112 cases of “hit and run” reported across the country every day in the past year, according to the data.The cases of causing “hurt” by rash or negligent driving on public way stood at 1.30 lakh in 2020, 1.60 lakh in 2019 and 1.66 lakh in 2018, while the cases of “grievous hurt” stood at 85,920, 1.12 lakh and 1.08 lakh, respectively, the data showed.Meanwhile, 52 cases of deaths due to negligence relating to rail accidents were recorded across the country in 2020, from 55 in 2019 and 35 in 2018, the report showed.During 2020, India also logged 133 cases of “deaths due to medical negligence”, up from 201 in 2019 and 218 in 2018, the NCRB data showed.There were 51 cases of “deaths due to negligence of civic bodies” in 2020 while there were 147 cases in 2019 and 40 in 2018, according to the report.Another 6,367 cases of “deaths due to other negligence” were reported across the country in 2020, up from 7,912 in 2019 and 8,687 in 2018, it showed.The NCRB stated in the report that the country remained under complete lockdown from March 25, 2020 till May 31, 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic during which the movement in public space was “very limited”.
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