Sun, 28 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 28, 2026 · 21:05
Jammu And Kashmir News Updated Jun 28, 2026

Eight CISF Personnel Injured in Road Accident Near Vaishno Devi Shrine

Eight CISF personnel and a civilian driver were injured when their bus overturned near Mata Vaishno Devi shrine in Reasi district on Sunday. Three head constables—Sammy Kumar, M.M. Dubey, and constable P.K. Traya—are in serious condition and admitted to Narayana hospital in Katra. Other injured, including a sub-inspector and driver Virender Singh, are stable at the Community Health Centre. The accident highlights ongoing road safety issues in J&K due to treacherous terrain, rash driving, and inadequate infrastructure.

Eight CISF personnel, civilian driver injured in road accident near Vaishno Devi

Jammu, June 28

Eight Central Industrial Security Force personnel and a civilian driver were injured in a road accident near Mata Vaishno Devi shrine in J&K's Reasi district on Sunday, police said,.

Police said the accident occurred when a bus carrying them overturned along the Tarakote route to the shrine.

The condition of three of the injured CISF personnel - Head Constables Sammy Kumar and M.M. Dubey and constable P.K. Traya - was said to be serious, officials said.

The seriously injured personnel were admitted to the Narayana hospital in Katra town, the officials said.

The rest of the injured, who included a sub-inspector and the civilian driver, Virender Singh, were admitted to the Community Health Centre in Katra, where their condition is said to be stable.

The officials said the CISF personnel, deployed in the shrine area, were heading back to their camp after work.

Road accidents in Jammu & Kashmir are primarily caused by a combination of treacherous hilly terrain, rash driving, and inadequate road infrastructure. These factors are severely exacerbated by overloading, lack of strict traffic enforcement, and delayed emergency response systems along major highways.

The crisis on J&K roads is driven by several factors, including human error and negligent driving, over-speeding & glorification of speed, overtaking on blind curves, and impatient driving, which lead to a large portion of head-on collisions.

A rise in mobile phone usage and texting while driving takes attention away from the difficult mountain roads.

Unqualified individuals operating vehicles, particularly teenagers on two-wheelers, also contribute significantly to road accidents.

Impaired driving due to alcohol or drugs is a notable concern, especially late at night.

Districts like Doda, Ramban, and Kishtwar feature narrow, winding roads with sheer drops and blind spots. Many stretches lack essential safety features like parapet walls, proper crash barriers, and adequate warning signage.

Frequent landslides, fog, heavy rains, and shooting stones make navigation highly perilous in certain seasons.

Passenger vehicles -- especially in rural and hilly areas -- routinely exceed their capacity, which severely affects vehicle balance and braking.

Operating ageing, unfit vehicles without proper brake or tyre checks, leads to mechanical failures.

Failure to wear helmets and seatbelts drastically increases the fatality rate during a crash.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

I've traveled those roads to Katra and they are indeed treacherous, especially during monsoon. What's the update on the seriously injured personnel? Hope the authorities have tightened road safety along the Tarakote route. Our CISF jawans deserve proper transport safety.

Arjun K

This is so unfortunate. The bus overturning on that route – you need to see those curves to believe it. I drive to Vaishno Devi every year and some stretches have no crash barriers at all. We spend so much on security but basic road safety is neglected. Government must act now.

James A

Nine injured including CISF personnel and a civilian driver. While the article rightly points out the infrastructure issues in J&K roads, I'm wondering if the bus had proper maintenance checks? Overloading and vehicle fitness are major causes in these hills. Speeding on winding roads is a death wish.

Priya S

Yaar, this is scary. My family was just planning a trip to the shrine. Our security forces work 24/7 and even their commute is unsafe. The article mentions delayed emergency response – that's the real problem. In hilly areas, every minute matters. Hope the CHC Katra and Narayana Hospital are providing best care.

Robert G

Terrible accident. The CISF personnel are deployed for our protection and this is what happens on the return journey. Doda, Ramban, Kishtwar – all these districts have roads that are basically death traps in bad weather. We need better road engineering, proper crash barriers, and strict enforcement of traffic rules. Government must allocate funds urgently.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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