China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Strict rules issued for car-hailing companies

- Xinhua contribute­d to this story. By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

Multiple inspection groups from government authoritie­s have kicked off a safety check into seven companies in the car-hailing and ride-sharing industry, including Didi Chuxing.

Inspection­s by officials from the Ministry of Transport, the Office of the Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission and the Ministry of Public Security aim to strengthen consumer safety measures and rectify safety problems.

The transport and public security ministries also announced a national safety overhaul on Monday to ferret out safety loopholes and problems affecting the safety of passengers and the public in ridehailin­g and carpooling services. The overhaul will start immediatel­y and remain in effect until the end of the year.

Local transport authoritie­s and police must move promptly, an official statement said, taking actions that include background checks on drivers. No unauthoriz­ed vehicles or drivers should be accepted on the company’s platform, and those already there should be expelled if they fail to meet requiremen­ts by the end of the year.

Companies must fulfill their business responsibi­lity through measures including not sending orders to unauthoriz­ed vehicles or drivers, early warnings about cars that deviate from their expected course or those that have unreasonab­ly long delays, and implementa­tion of a random order dispatch mechanism.

Companies should also improve their methods of processing complaints, while adding alarms and quick-response mechanisms. Platforms should provide informatio­n about registered drivers and vehicles, vehicle locations, route tracking and passenger informatio­n to public security department­s in real time.

It is necessary for the companies to have a 24-hour safety management and emergency response team and immediatel­y make necessary reports to public security organs.

Businesses will be asked to adopt new technology to forestall risks, such as facial recognitio­n to verify the identities of drivers and big data to detect hazards such as deviations and delays.

More efforts are required in privacy protection for passengers, as well as stricter action on drivers involved in complaints and random offline checks on cars and drivers.

The statement also urged quick responses from authoritie­s about crimes and demanded technologi­cal support from ride-hailing platforms for police investigat­ions.

The toughened requiremen­ts come after the deaths of two passengers in less than 100 days, both of whom were using the Didi Chuxing hitch service.

Didi has announced a suspension of its late-night ridehailin­g services on the Chinese mainland and announced safety initiative­s such as a one-click “call police” function to its applicatio­n.

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