Visakhapatnam had one really disturbing day on June 21,2026,with two separate road accidents taking two lives . And honestly,when such incidents happen back-to-back in same city,it leaves very uneasy feeling .
First accident happened near Auto Nagar in Gajuwaka,where 18-year-old youth was hit by a speeding lorry . Impact was so severe that he died on spot itself,which is just heartbreaking to even read.
Police later shifted his body for post-mortem examination and registered case to investigate how exactly accident happened . But for family,no investigation can undo that moment now.
And shortly after that,another tragedy happened near NAD Junction . A 35-year-old man was run over by an APSRTC city bus while he was reportedly trying to cross road.
Preliminary reports say he suffered severe injuries and later lost his life because of them . Again,same question comes up — how are people supposed to feel safe on busy city roads when one small crossing attempt can turn fatal?
Few things standing out from this day:
- First accident involved a speeding lorry near Auto Nagar in Gajuwaka,where an 18-year-old died .
- Second accident involved an APSRTC city bus near NAD Junction,where a 35-year-old man lost his life .
- Another lorry accident under Gajuwaka police station limits caused serious injuries and traffic congestion.
And as if two deaths were not enough,there was another road mishap under Gajuwaka police station jurisdiction . A lorry collided with another lorry from behind,and driver of crashing vehicle sustained serious injuries .
He was quickly taken to hospital for medical treatment . That crash also created heavy traffic congestion in area,and police had to respond fast to clear road and bring traffic flow back to normal .
Tbh,this is not small thing ah. Three road incidents around same time,with two deaths and one serious injury,shows how dangerous urban traffic can become when speed,congestion and poor road discipline all mix together.
Local police are investigating all three incidents now to find exact causes . But bigger worry is still sitting there only — how many more reminders do cities need before roads stop feeling like daily risk…







