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More than 200,000 road deaths a year in China: WHO
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 6, 2015


Second China Uber office under investigation: official
Beijing (AFP) May 6, 2015 - Chinese authorities have visited a second office of Internet taxi-hailing service Uber, an official said Wednesday, widening an apparent crackdown on the controversial company.

Police "visited" Uber's offices in the southwestern city of Chengdu "to get some information", an official at the city's transport commission told AFP, without giving her name.

Pictures posted online showed about 12 uniformed officers in an unidentifiable building, with netizens describing it as the Uber office in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province.

The visit comes after another Uber office in Guangzhou was raided last Thursday.

Uber currently operates in nine cities across China, including the capital Beijing and financial hub Shanghai.

The US-based company helps put customers in touch with private drivers as an alternative to traditional taxis.

It has become the focus of global controversy and is facing legal challenges and limits on its activities.

Taxi companies claim Uber drivers should be regulated in the same way as normal cabs and are leading the campaign against the service, which has a small but growing market share in China.

The popularity of private-car booking enterprises such as Uber and China's dominant taxi-hailing apps Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache has soared in China, where traditional taxis are criticised for poor service with rude drivers who routinely ignore customers on the street.

Chinese search engine Baidu, the country's equivalent of Google, said in December it had purchased a stake in Uber.

More than 200,000 people are killed on China's notoriously dangerous roads every year, the World Health Organisation said Wednesday -- at least four times official government statistics.

Writing in the government-published China Daily newspaper, the WHO's representative in the country Bernhard Schwartlaender said the estimated deaths were "entirely preventable".

"In China, over 10,000 children under 15 years of age die each year as a result of injuries sustained in a road crash," he added. "Many more are severely injured."

The WHO's 2013 global status report on road safety estimated Chinese road deaths at 275,983 in 2010.

Government data for road deaths in China are shrouded in secrecy, like many statistics in the country, and the WHO figures are strikingly higher than official pronouncements.

The most recent figures available from the ministry of transport, cited by a vice-minister at a forum, said 60,000 people were killed on the roads in 2012 -- less than a quarter of the estimate in the WHO document.

China's National Bureau of Statistics said in February that last year road traffic deaths ran at a rate of 2.22 people per 10,000 vehicles.

It said separately that there were a total of 154.47 million vehicles available for civilian use in the period.

Those figures imply at least 34,292 road deaths in 2014 -- less than an eighth of the WHO estimate.

Fatal road accidents are a serious problem in China, where traffic regulations are often flouted.

The country's frequently overcrowded long-distance buses are prone to accidents, with individual incidents regularly causing dozens of deaths.

In July last year, 43 people died when a van carrying inflammable liquid hit a bus on a motorway in central China.

In August, a tour bus plunged into a valley in Tibet after hitting two vehicles, leaving 44 people dead and 11 injured.

Schwartlaender said China was making "some progress" with road safety laws but added: "It is not enough to adopt laws. They must also be properly and rigorously enforced."

According to the WHO report, China's estimated traffic-related death rate of 20.5 per 100,000 people was in line with the 20.1 average for middle-income countries, but higher than the 8.7 seen in high-income nations.


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Uber office raided in southern China: report
Beijing (AFP) May 1, 2015
Taxi app Uber's office in the southern city of Guangzhou has been raided by authorities, a report said Friday, in an apparent crackdown on the Internet ride-sharing service. Officials from the public security, traffic, and industry and commerce authorities visited Uber's office on Thursday night and seized numerous iPhones, the Guangzhou-based Southern Metropolis Daily said. The newspape ... read more


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