China Daily

No justificat­ion for seizing legally parked bikes

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AFTER A VIDEO SHOWING LOCAL URBAN PATROL OFFICERS in Shanghai removing legally parked bikes of bike-sharing company Mobike was posted online, it was reported that more than 4,000 bikes, about 3,500 of which are owned by Mobike, have been impounded in the city. Beijing Youth Daily commented on Thursday:

Bike-sharing companies are swallowing a bitterswee­t pill as their rapid success is being accompanie­d by unexpected loss or damage to their assets. Among all the risks, the risk of their bikes being impounded remains one of the highest because urban patrol officers have been told to remove bicycles in violation of parking rules regardless of who owns them.

In many instances though, bikes that are parked legally are also being removed from the streets, and often they are damaged in the process. That imposes an extra financial burden on the service providers.

What happened in Shanghai is even more questionab­le as the video shows bikes of the bike-sharing company Mobike that were parked legally were also impounded. Reports said that the management officers were demanding an “administra­tion fee” from the bike-sharing service provider to release the bikes. The negotiatio­ns did not work out. The urban patrol officers, who refrained from offering an explanatio­n for the administra­tion fee, have reportedly kept declining the bike-sharing company’s request to return its bikes.

If this is the case, the enforcemen­t of the rules has oversteppe­d the boundaries.

Admittedly, it is the job of urban patrol officers to keep public spaces in order and illegal parking in check. But this does not justify their current approach to managing the bikes and their reluctance to improve their work in the face of this emerging industry.

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