Nepal, July 1 -- The Ministry of Infrastructure Development has recently introduced a draft bill that seeks to revamp road safety in Nepal through a regime of significantly escalated traffic fines. While the intention to curb the nation's alarming rate of road fatalities-currently standing at 28 deaths per 100,000 people-is noble, the proposed penalties have sparked a national debate. With fines ranging from Rs500 for jaywalking to a staggering Rs100,000 for unauthorised vehicle modifications, the legislation represents a move from nominal deterrents to what some experts describe as prohibitive, and perhaps unrealistic, financial burdens.

The fundamental purpose of a traffic fine is to modify behaviour before a tragedy occurs. Proponents...