Cyclists hold protests as India's Kolkata city bans cycling on key roads

KOLKATA (AFP) - Thousands of angry cyclists held noisy protests in the centre of the Indian city of Kolkata on Wednesday over a move by the local government to ban them from major roads in the congested metropolis.

Under beaming sunshine, they gathered in the Esplanade area of the former colonial capital, chanting "We want cycles back!" and holding placards which read "Turn off your engine. Kids breathe here!"

"Banning cycles in a city like Kolkata does not make any sense. It's a crazy decision," Mr Gautam Shroff, a spokesman for local cycling group Ride 2 Breathe, told AFP.

"We wonder when many countries are encouraging cycling in a bid to ease growing pollution, why the authorities put a ban on cycling here?" he said.

The local police barred bikers as well as the city's famous hand-pulled rickshaws from 174 roads and streets in August to try to reduce the legendary traffic-jams in the eastern city of 14 million people.

Officers recently started seizing bikes, further provoking the city's legions of cyclists who are mostly poor working-class people who run a daily gauntlet among thousands of aggressively driven cars and trucks.

"Police are harassing cycle riders. My cycle was seized a week ago when I was riding to supply milk," said Mr Yogesh Yadav, a milkman who works in the centre of the city.

"We will fight against the decision," he added.

Average traffic speeds locally are down to 14kmh to 18kmh compared with India's average of 22kmh, state Transport Minister Madan Mitra explained to AFP.

"Kolkata has less cars than other metropolitan cities in the country, but most of its roads and streets are narrow," he explained.

"It's a decision to ease the traffic bottlenecks and increase the speed of vehicles," Mr Mitra said, adding: "It's not a blanket ban. One can ride cycles in lanes and by-lanes of the city."

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