The travel of people on railways is one of the most frequent ways that people get transported around India. Trains are quick, easy to move and transport many people per day. Still safety is really a need for train trains which will come with automatic closing doors. If people try to leave from the train while on board when it's moving (they’re stuck outside when it goes into motion in a train) it can be very dangerous. A young boy was stuck outside when the train began to move and the train was going to stop. Such thoughts of awareness and discipline need to be exercised with the train and for travelers.
Witnesses reported the boy had the option of getting out of the coach as the automatic doors closed. But the train started moving while he began to drift away and he couldn’t get out before the train moved around him. It was incredibly hazardous for him, and likely to fall into the tracks, either falling and hurting himself or being injured by the train, but, for example, if someone can ignore the safety instructions in the coach, and they don’t, he might die.
Automatic doors are designed to make sure people are not moving in at the last minute as they want to get out or leave as soon as the closing doors don't open. And there’s something wrong, too. It makes some things dangerous and dangerous enough for a car accident. But the boy was too lax in thinking properly; and that the whole thing was about a person to be in charge, one to know when or not.
Stepping out of a train with automatic doors not only is dangerous, it can be deadly. Someone may collapse into the tracks by mistake. In crowded trains, that can cause panic and even hurt other passengers. The railways have reminded travellers not to board when doors shut down: even then travelers often don’t stop.
And the safety rules of railway are in place for a reason in this one instance, and automatic doors would be meant to protect passengers, not confront them. Parents have to be there to guide children and elders have to do the right thing that we told them to do. The boy’s narrow escape should serve as a lesson: never go out of a coach before all doors shut. Safety can always go first and discipline in public transport is the only way to prevent accidents.