Off the wire
Mozambique becomes 29th State free of all known landmines  • Pakistani PM opposes military solution to Afghan problem  • UN human rights expert urges relax of sanctions against Sudan  • UAE unveils 10-point plan to upgrade economy  • Swiss GDP records flat growth in Q3  • China reiterates non-acceptance of S. China Sea arbitration  • Xinhua world news summary at 1530 GMT, Dec. 1  • Feature: Internal Palestinian feuds keep Gaza key crossings closed indefinitely  • 380 cases of HIV infections reported in Singapore in first 10 months in 2015  • China to play e-sports worlds in Seoul  
You are here:   Home

Road rage rising in China

Xinhua, December 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

Chinese traffic police have handled more than 17 million cases involving road rage like arbitrary lane changes and dangerous overtaking this year, as the world's largest car market struggles to equip its drivers with better road etiquette.

As part of its campaign to educate drivers, the Ministry of Public Security described road rage as a major traffic safety hazard on Tuesday, the eve of National Traffic Safety Day.

Though the number of cases handled by police has only risen by 2.8 percent year on year, there are more tragedies involving road rage. In 2013, 80,200 accidents were attributed to anger behind the wheel, a 4.9-percent year-on-year increase. The number rose by 2.4 percent in 2014.

In May, a video showing a male driver beating a female driver in retaliation for a dangerous lane change left many Chinese people stunned.

More recently, a driver in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province was lambasted by the public after he intentionally forced an ambulance to pull over several times.

According to the ministry, China has more than 169 million car owners.

It also warned drivers, at 322 million now, of "distracted driving," which it said caused 21,570 deaths in 2014. Endi