Greater Noida Police on Tuesday arrested builder Abhay Kumar, owner of MZ Wiztown, in connection with the death of 27-year-old software engineer Yuvraj Mehta, whose car plunged into a deep, unbarricaded construction pit on Sector 150 amid dense fog.
Greater Noida Police took a key step in the ongoing investigation into the tragic death of software engineer Yuvraj Mehta by arresting builder Abhay Kumar, owner of the MZ Wiztown real estate project in the Knowledge Park area. Kumar was named as an accused in the FIR and taken into custody by the Knowledge Park police station team on Tuesday afternoon.
Police officials stated that the arrest followed detailed inquiries linking Kumar and his company’s construction site to the circumstances that led to Mehta’s death.
The FIR includes charges of criminal negligence and culpable homicide due to negligence, registered under relevant sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
According to authorities, a deep excavation pit, being dug for the basement of a commercial building, was left without safety barricades, reflectors, or warning signage, creating a deadly hazard on a normally busy road.
Mehta, 27, was returning home late on 16 January, when his SUV plunged into this water-filled excavation pit in dense fog, leaving him trapped and ultimately claiming his life.
A Horrific Accident and Outrage Over Safety Lapses
The incident unfolded around midnight when Mehta, a resident of Tata Eureka Park and a software engineer working in Gurugram, lost control of his vehicle near Sector 150 due to poor visibility caused by heavy fog. The car broke through a damaged boundary wall and plunged into the unbarricaded pit that was filled with water.
Eyewitness accounts and police reports indicate that Mehta managed to climb onto the roof of his submerged vehicle and called his father for help, even sharing his live location via WhatsApp and using his phone torch to signal rescuers. However, despite desperate attempts to save him, he remained trapped for nearly 90 minutes before succumbing to the conditions.
Rescue teams from the police, fire department, State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), and National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) arrived at the scene but were reportedly hampered by fog, hazardous conditions, and the absence of adequate rescue equipment.
Mehta’s father, Rajkumar Mehta, has strongly criticised the authorities and called for swift justice. “My son lost his life because of the lack of infrastructure and facilities.
He only needed to be handed a rope to be saved,” he said, highlighting the emotional tragedy at the heart of the case. Protests and widespread public outrage have followed, with citizens demanding stronger accountability for construction safety and emergency response systems.
Compounding the anger, reports now indicate that the developers named in the FIR – including MZ Wiztown Planner Ltd and Lotus Greens Construction Pvt Ltd – owed the Noida Authority around ₹3,000 crore in outstanding dues, raising further questions about regulatory oversight and enforcement.
Government and Administrative Response
In the aftermath of the tragedy and rising public pressure, the Uttar Pradesh government has taken a series of administrative actions aimed at ensuring accountability.
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath ordered the removal of Noida Authority CEO Lokesh M, who was also serving as Managing Director of the Noida Metro Rail Corporation. Lokesh, a 2005-batch IAS officer, has been put on “compulsory waiting,” with no fresh posting assigned yet.
The government has also constituted a three-member Special Investigation Team (SIT) to conduct a thorough probe into the incident, headed by the Additional Director General (ADG), Meerut Zone, Bhanu Bhaskar, along with the Meerut divisional commissioner and the chief engineer of the Public Works Department (PWD).
The SIT has been instructed to submit a detailed report within five days to the chief minister’s office.
At the local authority level, the Noida Authority has suspended a junior engineer responsible for traffic management in the area and issued notices to other officials overseeing safety compliance around construction sites.
These measures aim to reinforce the need for stringent enforcement of safety protocols around excavation zones, especially in high-risk conditions such as fog or at night.
Underlying Issues and Broader Concerns
Beyond the immediate tragedy and legal actions, experts and residents have pointed to systemic issues that may have contributed to the fatal accident. Long-standing concerns have been raised about poor drainage, incomplete infrastructure, and the failure of prior proposals aimed at mitigating waterlogging and hazardous conditions in the region.
Some reports suggest that a 2015 proposal by the Uttar Pradesh Irrigation Department to address water accumulation and drainage around the area could have prevented such tragedies, but it remained unimplemented for years.
Local communities have also highlighted that the stretch where the incident occurred has been flagged as unsafe before, with multiple accidents and near misses reported by residents who say barricades and warning lights were repeatedly requested but not provided.
Such concerns echo wider debates about urban infrastructure safety, regulatory enforcement, and public accountability in rapidly developing areas of the National Capital Region.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we recognise that this tragedy is more than a criminal case – it is a stark reminder of the human cost of systemic neglect and inadequate civic planning. The arrest of builder Abhay Kumar and the administrative actions taken by the UP government are steps toward accountability, yet they must be accompanied by deeper reforms.
Real safety cannot be ensured through FIRs and arrests alone; it requires proactive enforcement of safety standards, transparent oversight of development projects, and meaningful engagement with the communities that bear the consequences of negligence.
This incident should prompt policymakers, builders, and civic authorities to reflect honestly on how infrastructure projects are planned, regulated, and monitored. Lives should never be the price paid for oversight failures.





