China Daily (Hong Kong)

School bus safety, pork products and drunken drivers on agenda

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn Ministry urges checks on school bus safety Food firms told to step up pork management Campaign targets drunken drivers

Several ministry-level department­s, including those for education and market regulation, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

The Ministry of Education has urged schools to step up safety checks of school buses before the start of the new semester.

Local education authoritie­s should step up safety management of school buses and ensure relevant regulation­s are well implemente­d, the ministry said in a notice issued on Thursday.

The ministry also urged better training for drivers of school buses in terms of safety awareness and emergency management. Middle school students should take part in at least one session of safety education and evacuation drills, the ministry said.

The notice also called on parents to remind their children to be quiet and well behaved on school buses to ensure safety.

It also warned of the risks faced by students taking unlicensed school buses and encouraged public whistle-blowing on illegal school buses.

Chinese authoritie­s have urged food companies to step up their management of pork to guard against African swine fever after media reports of suspected contaminat­ed dumplings.

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation said on its microblog that the administra­tion and the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs had sent a joint work group to investigat­e a case in which dumplings were found to contain pork contaminat­ed with African swine fever.

The administra­tion said it has urged the food company to trace the source of the pork and dispose of related products.

The move followed media reports that samples from three batches of pork-filled dumplings from Sanquan Foods had tested positive for the nucleic acid associated with African swine fever.

The authoritie­s also called for local government­s to step up risk-control measures, regulate informatio­n disclosure and punish unscrupulo­us firms.

The Ministry of Public Security has launched a nationwide campaign targeting those driving under the influence of alcohol.

The ministry’s traffic management bureau said in a notice issued on Feb 18 that traffic police around the country should step up traffic checks, including daily inspection­s on the streets, to reduce the number of traffic accidents and casualties caused by drunken driving.

Drunken driving has long been one of the major causes of traffic accidents in China. Last year, 17,264 Chinese drivers were banned from driving for life, with 5,149 of them caught drunken driving after serious traffic accidents.

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