China Daily (Hong Kong)

Didi executives apologize, promise better security

Killing triggers rush for mobile app, but police question effectiven­ess

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

The founder and chief executive officer of ride-hailing company Didi Chuxing, Cheng Wei, and the company’s president, Liu Qing, apologized on Tuesday on Didi’s Sina Weibo account for any role it might have played in the death of a 20-year-old woman in Yueqing, Zhejiang province, who was raped and killed by one of their drivers on Friday. It was the second such killing this year.

Didi will put passenger safety at the core value in the company’s growth and developmen­t, rather than sheer size and profit, the statement said, adding that more emphasis will be placed on customer service.

The statement said Didi will re-evaluate its business model and service logic, and will deactivate its online “hitch” ride services indefinite­ly until such time as its security measures are accepted by the public.

Responding to the evidence collected by police investigat­ors, Didi will cooperate with public security department­s to build its security mechanism and will launch a system that will allow police to independen­tly monitor Didi, it said.

An app called Public Security 110 — which allows people to call the police via video — has become the most popular free download on Apple’s Chinese app store after the rape and murder on Friday.

On Monday, prosecutor­s in Yueqing formally arrested Zhong Yuan, the suspect, and charged him with robbery, rape and intentiona­l homicide. Police said the man confessed.

However, police have questioned the effectiven­ess of security apps.

“The new methods of calling police are still in trial use in some regions and are not available in all places. Remember to check if it has been put into use,” local police in Zigong, Sichuan province, said on Monday.

According to the People’s Public Security Newspaper, people can use Public Security 110 to quickly transmit images and their location directly to the police using a video call. Police officers can also speak directly to the victims or criminals if necessary.

The app was developed by the Hebei Public Security Department and is still undergoing testing, the department said on Tuesday.

Sending short messages to 12110 has been widely promoted online as a way to contact police, but the Henan Public Security Department said on toutiao.com on Monday that it is not using text messages to 12110 for emergency contacts and recommende­d that people call 110 for help.

As of Monday, government authoritie­s in at least 10 cities have ordered Didi Chuxing’s local branches to rectify problems with its online hitch services, which allow a customer to connect with a person heading in the same general direction. The requiremen­ts for Didi hitch drivers in the past have not been as strict as for its regular drivers.

The transporta­tion management authority in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, asked Didi to connect its operationa­l informatio­n and data to a national supervisio­n platform for cars that are hailed online, and to ensure the quality and accuracy of the informatio­n.

The Guangzhou Municipal Public Security Bureau also asked Didi to strengthen its informatio­n sharing with the police, submit relevant informatio­n as soon as possible and cooperate with investigat­ions and the collection of evidence.

Wang Fumin, deputy director of the Guangdong Department of Transporta­tion, said the government might introduce a procedure to allow passengers to contact police more easily in emergencie­s.

In another developmen­t, two men have been taken into administra­tive custody — one in Wuhan, Hubei province, and one in Shenzhen, Guangdong province — for making sexually suggestive comments about the woman who died on Friday, according to the Sina Weibo accounts of the police department­s in the two cities. The men, surnamed Shen, 29, and Zhang, 22, were both held after the remarks they made in a QQ chat group that claims to be a collection of Didi drivers. That claim has not been verified.

Police in Wuhan’s Caidian district and Shenzhen’s Bao’an district received tips of the men’s whereabout­s and caught them on Monday. Both confessed to making the remarks, police said.

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