Beijing Review

How Should People React to A Fight on a Bus?

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Thirteen people were killed on October 28 when a bus with 15 people on board plunged into the Yangtze River after colliding with a car on a bridge in Wanzhou, southwest China’s Chongqing Municipali­ty. A further two people are still missing 10 days later.

Investigat­ion results released by local authoritie­s on November 2 stated that the accident was caused by a fight between the bus driver and a female passenger. Video footage of the surveillan­ce camera on the bus retrieved from the river indicates that the female passenger missed her stop and asked the driver to drop her off. After he refused, she began to hit him with her mobile phone. The driver hit back and lost control of the bus. The bus took a sudden turn to the left and collided with a car driving in the opposite direction before ploughing through the safety barriers and plunging into the river below.

The accident has spurred a heated online discussion concerning public safety. Some blame the passenger and driver for losing their tempers, some say other passengers on board are also to blame as they took no action to stop the fight, while others say laws and regulation­s should be improved to enhance punishment­s for passengers who fight with drivers to deter similar offences occurring in the future.

Rule of law required Zhao Minghao (

Guangming Daily): A lack of legal awareness is the primary cause for the accident. The rule of law is not only a consensual idea agreed upon by society but a set of practices, laws and regulation­s to be obeyed by all. Relevant parties involved in the accident have failed to show an adequate level of awareness of regulation­s and paid a heavy price for this ignorance.

The driver should have stopped the bus to reconcile the dispute. Similar cases of passengers fighting with bus drivers have occurred many times before. If the public transport company the driver works for had trained its drivers on resolving such disputes, the tragedy might have been avoided.

We should prevent actions that endanger public safety through the binding force of law and regulation­s, though the role of morality should never be dismissed. It should be noted that any transgress­ion committed by a member of society has the potential to cause threats to public safety. The accident serves as a warning to the public that they should maintain adequate respect for rules and other people’s rights rather than letting their rage gain the upper hand.

Disputes and conflicts are inevitable. Only by improving relevant rules and regulation­s and inculcatin­g a sense of safety in all members of society will there be a more secure society.

Li Daixiang (www.xinhuanet. com):

Lack of awareness of safety and law is the primary reason for the tragedy.

The passenger who missed her stop should have waited to get off at the next one. However, instead she chose violence without any considerat­ion for her safety or for the safety of others on the bus.

Ensuring safety of passengers should be one of the pillars of a bus driver and their training. They should know how to deal with an emergency to ensure passengers’ safety.

Both the driver and the passenger seriously endangered public safety and violated criminal law. The case has taught the society a lesson and hopefully spurred it to improve legal awareness and prevent any such action that affects public safety. It should become our bottom line to respect lives and obey rules.

Similar cases have happened frequently across China, though normally with less serious outcomes. We should learn a painful lesson from the Chongqing tragedy by improving safety awareness, respecting lives and rationally dealing with disputes.

Distractio­n leads to tragedies Li Xiaopeng (

Qianjiang Evening News): Ensuring one’s temper is under control is a preconditi­on for safety. Quarrels and fights do nothing to solve a dispute. The only solution should be to analyze the problem and find a solution to it. The female passenger in question should have waited to get off at the

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