China drivers vent road rage (Reuters) Updated: 2006-08-04 12:33 Beijing is plagued with
drivers flaunting military and state security license plates, real and bogus, to
enjoy immunity from traffic rules -- a privilege reserved for China's political
elite, official media reported.
Cars bearing the red-lettered plates of the People's Liberation Army and
armed police, and ones indicating "state security" clearance, are increasingly
familiar on the national capital's crowded roads, a Beijing newspaper reported
on Friday.
They regularly flout traffic lights, no-turn signs and other road rules, and
traffic police rarely risk pulling over drivers who effectively outrank them.
But in a rare public venting of one of ordinary Beijing residents' biggest
gripes, the Market News lashed out at "privileged cars" and said many of the
official plates were fake or illegally obtained.
"The masses of special privilege cars barging around and driving as they
please has long been a chronic ailment in urban traffic," the paper said in an
editorial comment.
The paper -- which is run by the People's Daily, -- suggested that allowing
privileged drivers to use bus-only lanes and defy traffic lights with impunity
violated the rule of law.
"The key problem here is there is no exercise of equality before the law,"
the paper said. "Traffic police all know that punishing a privileged car gets a
warning, and letting them go makes you a model."
In the United States, the paper noted, government cars display signs "not as
a symbol of special status, but on the contrary so the public can exercise
oversight," the paper said.
The paper printed what it said was a widely-circulated Internet complaint
from a driver fed up with military and state security-approved cars scoffing at
road rules.
The immunity given to China's state elite was encouraging other drivers to
buy fake plates for as little as 300 yuan (about $40), it said, describing a
spot near the rising 2008 Olympic Games stadiums that specialises in selling
them.
"It's because the genuine privileged cars are so piggish that these bogus
plates dare to suggest they have powerful connections," the report quoted one
driver as saying.
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