A number of young people have lost their lives while doing wheelie recently.
Lollywood’s oldest stuntman still on deck
“High-pitched sounds of motorcycles keep on disturbing us,” Wasif Ahmed said who lives near Sixth Road locality.
Bikers in squads race and do the wheelie on Benazir Bhutto Road, formerly Murree Road, throughout the night till Sehri, he added.
Wasif who is a cloth merchant doing business at Raja Bazaar said that during Ramazan he had to come home late in the night and often witnessed young people, mostly teenage boys, doing the wheelie and racing on the road.
The young bikers are also seen on Peshawar Road doing wheeling, Qazi Amin, who lives in Westridge, said.
He said that the young bikers always put their lives in danger. The stuntmen prepare special bikes for wheelie and racing. The bikes are modified to keep balance on rear wheel without minimising the speed.
“Young boys interested in wheelie remove many parts of their bikes. They remove the front and rear mud guards, speedometer, indicators, and often headlights to minimise its weight and to improve its efficiency”, said Muhammad Miskeen who works in a motorcycle workshop near Liaqat Bagh.
He said that modification of 70cc motorcycle costs Rs10,000 to Rs15,000 and 125cc cost Rs20,000 to Rs25,000. He said that the bikers change many other parts to keep the original parts safe.
There are reports that some people are involved in betting on the stunts and racing on motorcycles. Involvement of money further pushes young men to take part in a wheelie.
Motorcycle mechanics are mostly involved in betting and pushing young bikers for stunts.
The wheelie has claimed lives of many young men. On June 18, a young man died after his bike smashed against a pillar of elevated metro bus track.
Stunts just got serious
Adnana Bhatti was working as a salesman in a shop in Saddar. He along with his friend was returning home just before Iftar.
City traffic police, however, believe that they have brought the wheelie under control in the city.
Traffic police claim
Senior Traffic Police Officer Iftikharul Haq told The Express Tribune that he had formed special squads to crack down against the young bikers involved in stunts. He said that the police had started arresting them and confiscating their bikes.
He noted that in one week the police confiscated over 700 bikes for speeding and wheelie. He noted that the police, however, had decided not to register criminal cases against them and let them go after warning.
Haq said that the police did not want to spoil the future of young boys by sending them to jail. He said that the parents were warned against wheelie by their young boys.
The CTO said that the police had to handle the speeding bikers with care because if the police chased them, they could be hurt in an accident. The police, however, had registered criminal cases on charges of rash driving and misuse of a motorcycle against the young men arrested second or third time while doing the wheelie.
“It is the duty of the parents to make their sons aware of dangers and risks involved in doing wheelie and racing. The stunts put their and others’ lives at risk”, the police officer said.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 27th, 2016.
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