China Daily

Blacklists ban air, rail travel

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@ chinadaily.com.cn

China issued its first blacklists for violators of airline and railway safety rules on Friday to promote social honesty, safeguard security and order, and discourage future troublemak­ers.

The Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China issued the blacklist, which consists of 86 violators, and banned them from air travel for a year starting on Friday.

The list is based on the punishment issued by police around the country. On the blacklist, 64 of the violators were found to be carrying banned or dangerous substances, including replica firearms, knives, bullets and lighters.

Fifteen violators used fake IDs or impersonat­ed others when boarding a plane, two disrupted flight order, two obstructed security checks and three smoked during flight.

Other offenses that could also lead violators to being banned include fabricatin­g and purposeful­ly spreading false informatio­n on airline safety status; forcing entry onto airplanes or runways or into cockpits; interferin­g with or assaulting airline staff or damaging airline property; and stealing property from other passengers, according to the administra­tion.

The blacklist was first published on the administra­tion’s website on May 23 to give the violators a week to appeal. The administra­tion said on Friday that the blacklist took effect without any changes.

The air travel blacklist came exactly one year after a 36-year-old female PhD student from a prestigiou­s university in Wuhan, Hubei province, angrily beat an airline clerk at Wuhan Tianhe Internatio­nal Airport.

The security footage of the incident went viral online. The student, identified by her alias Zhang Dan, said she was frustrated after missing her plane and later apologized for her actions. She was detained by police for 10 days on an assault charge.

Also on Friday, the Railway Customer Service Center of China issued its first blacklist consisting of 31 people who seriously violated China’s railway regulation­s. They will be barred from buying train tickets for 180 days, and the ban will start next week.

According to the list, 21 of the violators were punished for smoking on trains, traveling without tickets or failing to pay the ticket fee upon arrival. Ten of the violators were punished by police for reselling tickets, using false IDs for privileged seats or disrupting public order and railway safety, which resulted in a major negative social impact.

Zhang Xiulan, a professor of social developmen­t and public policy at Beijing Normal University, said the blacklists are necessary to uphold social morality, ethics and honesty.

 ?? CAAC ?? Safety violations that will put offenders on a blacklist, banning them from flights.
CAAC Safety violations that will put offenders on a blacklist, banning them from flights.

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