Grieving over the loss of 31 lives in last week's New Saeedabad accident, Kawish quotes some survivors as saying that the passenger bus collided with the tanker because its driver had dozed off and the wipers of the bus were not working.
The daily writes that Pakistan is among those countries where road accidents take a heavy toll of human lives. Dilapidated roads and inefficient traffic police are not the only factors to be blamed; recklessness of drivers of public transport causes most of such gruesome accidents.
Drivers bribe traffic personnel and violate traffic laws and rule the road. As a result, even minor flaws, non-functioning wipers in this case, lead to fatal accidents.
The rules of safe driving require that a driver should not be overworked and exhausted and should not influence drugs, but the uneducated lot cares little these rules.
The paper suggests establishment of an institution for drivers training with emphasis on safety rules and ethics and making it mandatory for drivers of public transport vehicles to get certificates from it.
It also calls for ensuring that traffic laws are followed in letter and spirit. Awami Awaz points out that an acute shortage of drinking water has resurfaced in Hyderabad which lies on the bank of the River Indus.
The irrigation department says that the canals of the Kotri Barrage, one of which supplies water to the city, were closed earlier this year because of repair work at the Sukkur Barrage and that the Water and Sanitation Agency of the Hyderabad Development Authority had been informed about it in advance.
At the same time, Wasa has appealed to the irrigation department to reopen the canal because its store of water is about to exhaust. The paper says that the crisis recurs every year in the period of canal closure in January but Wasa seldom plans in advance to meet the shortage.
It adds that the existing system is unable to meet the requirement of rising population of the city. The situation calls for new arrangements, including larger storage facilities to ensure an uninterrupted supply of water to the city.
Ibrat supports a resolution adopted by the Shah Sachal Sami International Peace Conference, demanding relaxation in visa restrictions for visits between Pakistan and India.
The paper also calls for lifting of ban on exchange of books between the two countries because the literature produced in the neighbouring states may play a role in accelerating the peace process in South Asia.