Fiji Sun

Chinese Told to Behave Ahead of Festive Mass Migration

-

The Chinese authoritie­s have vowed to crack down on uncivilise­d behaviour on public transport as the country’s largest annual migration of people fast approaches.

Tens of millions of Chinese will be hitting the road to return to their hometowns for the Spring Festival, or Chinese New Year, with most of them packing into buses and others into trains and planes for the journey home.

This year’s spring rush, or chunyun, will see nearly three billion trips made during the 40day festive period, the authoritie­s reckon.

It is also certain to push China’s transporta­tion system to its limits - scenes of chaos on board trains or at transport hubs will be common.

In a bid to minimise the chaos, China’s national planning body, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission (NDRC), warned last Friday that those who cause a nuisance on trains, flights and buses, or who wrongfully occupy seats, will be severely punished.

Travellers who behave in such a manner can be fined and detained by security agencies, and also blackliste­d and restricted from buying train or plane tickets for a period of time, said Mr Lian.

A record will also be entered into the offender’s personal social credit history, he added.

Mr Lian told reporters that since March last year, the number of people who have been put on aviation and rail blacklists are 4,209 and 1,793 respective­ly.

Incidents involving rude and uncouth passengers make the headlines regularly. In some cases, there were fatal consequenc­es.

Last October, a bus in Chongqing plunged into a river after a passenger attacked the driver because she had missed her stop. The crash killed all 15 people on board.

Mr Lian praised the media for shining the spotlight on such bad behaviour, noting that the number of such cases has dropped.

Besides penalties, the authoritie­s will set up a platform on social networking app w to allow people to flag either bad or praisewort­hy civicminde­d behaviour.

Those who misbehave “must realise the serious consequenc­es of such untrustwor­thy actions, so trustworth­y and civilised behaviour becomes more commonplac­e”, said Mr Lian.

At Friday’s briefing, officials said about 2.99 billion trips are expected to be made during the 40-day Spring Festival travel rush from tomorrow until March 1. This is 0.6 per cent higher than the number of trips made last year.

About 2.46 billion of those trips will be made by long-distance coaches or cars, while 413 million journeys will be made by train.

Air travel will take up 73 million trips, and is the fastest-growing mode of transport, which saw a 12 per cent increase from last year. The remaining journeys are by boat. Vice-Minister for Transport Liu Xiaoming reminded travellers to behave in a civilised manner so as to ensure a “peaceful and smooth” journey for everyone returning home to be reunited with their families.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? The Jinan train station in eastern China’s Shandong province seeing its first peak passenger volume last Thursday before the Spring Festival travel rush begins.
Photo: Xinhua The Jinan train station in eastern China’s Shandong province seeing its first peak passenger volume last Thursday before the Spring Festival travel rush begins.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji