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Khalistan Commando Force militants hijacked a Haryana Roadways bus and killed 38 Hindu bus passengers. [3] 7 July 1987 Near Fatehabad: Sikh militants kill 34 Hindu bus passengers from two Haryana Roadways buses near Fatehabad [3] 15 June 1991 Ludhiana district 1991 Punjab killings; 110 passengers killed by Sikh militants. [17]
The bus involved in the attack was the Haryana Roadways bus numbered HYE 1735, traveling from Chandigarh to Rishikesh, a Hindu holy place.On the night of 6 July 1987, it carried 76 passengers (most of whom were Hindus [1]), when five attackers started trailing it. [2]
Haryana Roadways Engineering Corporation Ltd. is a subsidiary of Haryana Roadways. It was incorporated on 27 November 1987 in Gurgaon. It was established to fabricate bus bodies, mainly for Haryana Roadways. It fabricated 503 bodies in 2010-2011 alone. It is a profit making organisation which registered a profit of ₹ 5.86 crores in year 2010 ...
Around 1 km later, they stopped another Haryana Roadways bus going to Sirsa. This time, they did not board the overcrowded bus, and fired at the passengers from outside, possibly because they were in a hurry to leave. The shooting left four people dead. [2] Apart from the 34 dead, 18 people from the two buses were injured in the attack. [1]
Haryana Roadways; References This page was last edited on 17 October 2023, at 14:33 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
The Rohtak sisters viral video controversy involves a video that went viral on social media in India in late November 2014 and the events that followed. [1] The first video showed two sisters (referred to as the Rohtak sisters or the Sonepat sisters) [2] [3] beating three young men with a belt alleging that the men had harassed them.
It operates bus services between Delhi and the neighbouring states and union territories of Haryana, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand. Spanning about 5.3 acres, it handles over 1,800 buses a day. [1]
Major roadways include the Ring Road and the Outer Ring Road, which had a traffic density of 110,000 vehicles per day in 2001. Total road length of Delhi was 28,508 km including 388 km of National Highways. Major road-based public transport facilities in Delhi are provided by DTC buses, auto-rickshaws, taxis and cycle-rickshaws.