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SC recognizes safe walk on footpaths as fundamental right

A Bench of Justice PS Narasimha and Justice AS Chandurkar noted this right flows from the freedoms guaranteed under Articles 19 (which includes freedom of movement) and 21 (right to personal rights and liberty) of the Constitution. 

News Arena Network - New Delhi - UPDATED: June 19, 2026, 03:54 PM - 2 min read

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Supreme Court has held that a law is needed to protect right to walk safely on footpaths.


The Supreme Court on Friday held that the right to walk on safe, demarcated footpaths is a fundamental right, and will take priority over the movement of vehicles. The Apex Court has also emphasized need for making a law in this direction.

 

A Bench of Justice PS Narasimha and Justice AS Chandurkar noted this right flows from the freedoms guaranteed under Articles 19 (which includes freedom of movement) and 21 (right to personal rights and liberty) of the Constitution.  Framing pedestrian access as a constitutional guarantee, the Court underscored that public authorities are under a binding obligation to provide and maintain footpaths.

 

“If a road exists, there must then be a duty to ensure that a footpath is demarcated and maintained for the walkers. This is an enforceable duty. The fundamental right to walk on demarcated footpaths shall override the privilege of a motorised vehicle,” held the Court.If a road exists, there must then be a duty to ensure that a footpath is demarcated and maintained for the walkers.

 

The Court clarified that the freedom to walk is subject to reasonable restrictions, but added that it must be ensured that common spaces are not monopolised by vehicle drivers alone.The Bench observed that Indian cities and towns have long been designed with a disproportionate focus on vehicles, leaving pedestrians vulnerable and marginalised.“The absence of safe and comfortable footpaths to walk on, and even when they exist, their subjugation to motor transport, has been a civilizational problem,” said the Court.

 

Tracing the evolution of this neglect, the Court pointed to how urban planning gradually prioritised motorised transport over human movement.“It is rather strange that we failed to focus on recognizing and securing this ‘right to walk’. It may be because wheels eclipsed our imagination, and our municipal administration was busy creating roads that are suitable for motorised vehicles. It could also be elitism to start with, for machines with wheels were only for the rich, but as economies progressed and cheaper motor vehicles were introduced, the entire spectrum of motorised transportation dominated the roads, pushed aside the walkers to the extent that they are treated as a nuisance for the drivers who routinely run over the walkers and their footpaths," the Court remarked.

 

Making it clear that this approach can no longer continue, the Court said,“This should stop from now on as we declare the fundamental right to walk on demarcated footpaths alongside motorised roads.”The entire spectrum of motorised transportation dominated roads, pushed aside walkers. This should stop from now on as we declare the fundamental right to walk on demarcated footpathsThe judgment also identified the authorities responsible for implementing this right, stating that the obligation lies with urban and local bodies.

 

“We must affirm and secure to our citizens this fundamental right to walk on demarcated footpaths. Clear articulation and declaration of such a right is necessary to recognise the correlative duty to provision and maintain footpaths".

The observations were made in a case arising from a fatal road accident resulting in the demise of a five-year-old child, after he was struck by a tanker while walking to school with his father.The Court noted that the accident occurred in circumstances where there was no footpath or pedestrian crossing.

 

 

 

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