Asia | Bicycles and rickshaws in India

Four wheels good, two wheels bad

Some say Kolkata should back-pedal on its bicycle ban

TRAVEL within any Indian city is usually crowded and slow. But Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), capital of West Bengal, has certain advantages. Its underground rail network, which was the first to open in India in 1984, is being extended. Uniquely in the country, electric trams clatter along its streets. Public transport may look dilapidated but it functions reasonably well: urban ferries, suburban trains, smoky buses and motorised rickshaws shunt around the city’s 14m residents.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Four wheels good, two wheels bad”

No way to run a country

From the October 5th 2013 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

South Korea’s president survives an impeachment vote

More attempts to remove Yoon Suk Yeol will follow

Board of Control for Cricket in India Secretary Jay Shah hits a ball during the inauguration ceremony of Gujarat Cricket Association (GCA) Indoor Academy in Ahmedabad, India.

Jay Shah is the most powerful man in cricket

He has been helped by family ties and India’s cricketing might


An illustration of a smartphone with a sign hanging on it that reads "16+".

Australia wants to lead the big tech crackdown

It is more likely to be an example of how not to go about banning social media


Bushra Khan, Imran Khan’s wife, marches on Pakistan’s capital

Although her protest didn’t free him, it perhaps launched her political career

Martial law in South Korea—and then not. What comes next?

A rash, unexpected move by Yoon Suk Yeol, the president, tests the country’s democracy

Suffering from the Bhopal disaster in India continues, 40 years on

So does the search for justice for victims of the world’s worst industrial accident