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The Brutal Reality of the Mumbai Commute and Public Transport Safety

Thursday, May 21, 2026
5 min read
The Brutal Reality of the Mumbai Commute and Public Transport Safety

Another day. Another clip circulating online, exposing the brutal reality of the Mumbai commute. It’s hit social media hard, resonating way beyond the usual noise.

The video itself just shows men and women fighting for space on an absolutely packed local train during rush hour. You see people hanging precariously near the entrance, others just shoving from behind, trying to squeeze into the compartment. It’s chaos, pure desperation played out on the rails. It immediately throws the whole public transport safety issue in India’s financial capital into sharp focus.

What really stuck with people, though, wasn't just the mess. It was the faces. The sheer, visible exhaustion. Thousands of working professionals, students, daily wage earners—they just have to endure this routine. It isn't some rare event. It’s just the daily grind.

The reaction online was intense. People weren't just watching; they were reacting emotionally. You see comments flooding in, some calling the whole thing "heartbreaking," others screaming "unsafe beyond limits."

One person put it perfectly: “This isn’t public transport anymore; it’s survival .”

Then there’s the underlying fear. People think about leaving home every morning. They wonder if they’ll make it safely.

And then you get the pushback. Some people immediately jump to defending the system. They call the Mumbai locals the city’s lifeline. But others argue that this overcrowding has just become dangerously normal over the years.

There’s a strange tension there. People praise the hustle culture, the relentless energy of Mumbai, but clips like this pull back the curtain. They show the human cost hidden beneath that shiny facade.

One commenter pointed out the obvious risk: “One sudden jerk or slip is enough to cause a tragedy.”

And then there’s the observation about the women. The risks women face during those peak hours feel amplified. It’s a separate layer of danger.

“Women and men both deserve safer ways to travel,” someone wrote. Nobody should have to risk everything just to earn a living.

It’s that normalization that’s so unsettling. Some people feel like the sheer volume of people just makes the overcrowding acceptable. People only really react when something goes viral.

There’s a sense that the world outside Mumbai romanticizes the hustle. They see the energy. But this footage shows the actual, raw look at that hustle. It’s not glamorous. It’s this.

One viewer just said, “The train doors close in metros around the world. Here? People are hanging outside them.”

It makes you think about the whole system. The sheer density. It’s this feeling of anxiety that settles in instantly when you see it. It’s not just a traffic problem. It’s a psychological one. It’s this feeling that you’re constantly on the edge.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

#sensational#top news#global#trending

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