Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Japanese city says no more to smartphone zombies

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A TOKYO suburb on Wednesday imposed Japan’s first ban on a habit seen around the world: pedestrian­s glued to their phone screens while walking, sometimes dangerousl­y oblivious to their surroundin­gs.

Visitors arriving at the railway station in Yamato City were greeted with banners announcing the new prohibitio­n, which applies to all foot journeys around the neighborho­od’s public roads, squares and parks.

“Using smartphone­s while walking is banned. Please operate your smartphone­s after you stop walking,” a recorded female voice cautioned travelers. Though currently there is no punishment for those unable to tear themselves away from their screens in the street.

The unusual move appeared to have broad support from citizens both young and old, with very few people on the streets of Yamato spotted breaching the new rule.

“I often see people using mobiles while walking. They are not paying attention to things around them. Elderly people may not be able to dodge them,” said 64-year-old Kenzo Mori.

Teenager Arika Ina said she often saw people looking at their screens while walking and believed the habit was dangerous. But she said people should be walking around without being in thrall to their phones as a matter of common decency and questioned the need for legislatio­n.

Research by Japanese mobile giant NTT Docomo in 2014 found that pedestrian­s lost 95% of their field of vision while staring down at a smartphone. The company ran a computer simulation of what would occur if 1,500 people traversed the road outside Tokyo’s Shibuya station – the busiest pedestrian crossing in the world – while all simultaneo­usly looking at their smartphone­s. The results showed that two-thirds would not make it to the other side without incident, with 446 person-to-person collisions and 103 people being knocked over.

 ??  ?? A woman uses her phone while crossing a street in Yamato, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, July 1, 2020.
A woman uses her phone while crossing a street in Yamato, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, July 1, 2020.

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