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    This is the cheapest Petrol in the country, more dangerous roads than guns

    This is the cheapest Petrol in the country, more dangerous roads than guns

    There were so many road accidents in this country that many cars present in the huge pile of rubble still have blood markings and some still have clothes and shoes.

    Special things
    • Roads of this country more dangerous than guns
    • More than 45 million vehicles in a population of 60 lakh
    • Price of 1-liter Petrol is less than bottled water
    This is the cheapest Petrol in the country, more dangerous roads than guns
    This is the cheapest Petrol in the country, more dangerous roads than guns

    Tripoli: Life is not as dangerous as guns in Libya, due to life-threatening roads. The number of people killed in road accidents that occurred here was not even killed during the conflict that happened some years back in the country. The failure of traffic rules in Libya, failing to meet the deteriorating infrastructure and safety standards of cars are some of the reasons that make road accidents more dangerous than guns in Libya.

    A huge pile of hundreds of debris of hundreds of cars in the 'Tariq al-Sikka' public park in central Tripoli shows how many incidents have happened here. Many cars still have blood markings and some still have clothes and shoes. According to the Ministry of Transport of the Ministry of Home Affairs, in 2018 there were 4,115 road accidents across the country, in which 2,500 people were killed and more than 3,000 were injured.

    Departmental spokesman Colonel Abdelnasar Elafi said, "Libya is topped in terms of perishable road accidents per person." The number of people killed in Libya in road accidents last year was much higher than the number of people killed every year after the country's struggle began to demolish Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

    According to the department, the main reason for road accidents in Libya - driving at fast speed This is a country with a population of about 60 lakh and more than 45 lakh vehicles. The price of one-liter petrol here is less than the cost of one liter bottled water. After getting a government subsidy, the price of petrol is 0.15 Dinar (Rs 34.03). Chief of Transport Department General Mohammad Hadiya said that some of the demolished roads in Libya have not been "repaired" for 60 years since they have been completely destroyed.

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