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Driven to Kill

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Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit.

By Geoffrey Sant


150902_FOR_ChinaPedestrianDeaths.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

Look both ways: Pedestrians wait for the light to change in central Beijing on Sept. 18, 2007.
Photo by Teh Eng Koon/AFP/Getty Images

In April a BMW racing through a fruit market in Foshan in China’s Guangdong province knocked down a 2-year-old girl and rolled over her head. As the girl’s grandmother shouted, “Stop! You’ve hit a child!” the BMW’s driver paused, then switched into reverse and backed up over the girl. The woman at the wheel drove forward once more, crushing the girl for a third time. When she finally got out from the BMW, the unlicensed driver immediately offered the horrified family a deal: “Don’t say that I was driving the car,” she said. “Say it was my husband. We can give you money.”

It seems like a crazy urban legend: In China, drivers who have injured pedestrians will sometimes then try to kill them. And yet not only is it true, it’s fairly common; securitycameras have regularly captured drivers driving back and forth on top of victims to make sure that they are dead. The Chinese language even has an adage for the phenomenon: “It is better to hit to kill than to hit and injure.”

This 2008 television report features security camera footage of a dusty white Passat reversing at high speed and smashing into a 64-year-old grandmother. The Passat’s back wheels bounce up over her head and body. The driver, Zhao Xiao Cheng, stops the car for a moment then hits the gas, causing his front wheels to roll over the woman. Then Zhao shifts into drive, wheels grinding the woman into the pavement. Zhao is not done. Twice more he shifts back and forth between drive and reverse, each time thudding over the grandmother’s body. He then speeds away from her corpse.

Incredibly, Zhao was found not guilty of intentional homicide. Accepting Zhao’s claim that he thought he was driving over a trash bag, the court of Taizhou in Zhejiang province sentenced him to just three years in prison for “negligence.” Zhao’s case was unusual only in that it was caught on video. As the television anchor noted, “You can see online an endless stream of stories talking about cases similar to this one.”

“Double-hit cases” have been around for decades. I first heard of the “hit-to-kill” phenomenon in Taiwan in the mid-1990s when I was working there as an English teacher. A fellow teacher would drive us to classes. After one near-miss of a motorcyclist, he said, “If I hit someone, I’ll hit him again and make sure he’s dead.” Enjoying my shock, he explained that in Taiwan, if you cripple a man, you pay for the injured person’s care for a lifetime. But if you kill the person, you “only have to pay once, like a burial fee.” He insisted he was serious—and that this was common.


Geoffrey Sant wrote about drivers in China who intentionally kill pedestrians. Ask him anything.

Most people agree that the hit-to-kill phenomenon stems at least in part from perverse laws on victim compensation. In China the compensation for killing a victim in a traffic accident is relatively small—amounts typically range from $30,000 to $50,000—and once payment is made, the matter is over. By contrast, paying for lifetime care for a disabled survivor can run into the millions. The Chinese press recently described how one disabled man received about $400,000 for the first 23 years of his care. Drivers who decide to hit-and-kill do so because killing is far more economical. Indeed, Zhao Xiao Cheng—the man caught on a security camera video driving over a grandmother five times—ended up paying only about $70,000 in compensation.

video captured a wealthy young man reversing his BMW X6 out of a parking spot. He hits a 3-year-old boy, knocking the child to the ground and rolling over his skull. The driver then shifts his BMW into drive and crushes the child again. Remarkably, the driver then gets out of the BMW, puts the vehicle in reverse, and guides it with his hand as he walks the vehicle backward over the boy’s crumpled body. The man’s foot is so close to the toddler’s head that, if alive, the boy could have reached out and touched him. The driver then puts the BMW in drive again, running over the boy one last time as he drives away.

Here too, the driver was charged only with accidentally causing a person’s death. (He claimed to have confused the boy with a cardboard box or trash bag.) Police rejected charges of murder and even of fleeing the scene of the crime, ignoring the fact that the driver ran over the boy’s head as he sped away.


These drivers are willing to kill not only because it is cheaper, but also because they expect to escape murder charges. In the days before video cameras became widespread, it was rare to have evidence that a driver hit the victim twice. Even in today’s age of cellphone cameras, drivers seem confident that they can either bribe local officials or hire a lawyer to evade murder charges.

Perhaps the most horrific of these hit-to-kill cases are the ones in which the initial collision didn’t injure the victim seriously, and yet the driver came back and killed the victim anyway. In Sichuan province, an enormous, dirt-encrusted truck knocked down a 2-year-old boy. The toddler was only dazed by the initial blow, and immediately climbed to his feet. Eyewitnesses said that the boy went to fetch his umbrella, which had been thrown across the street by the impact, when the truck reversed and crushed him, this time killing him.

Despite the eyewitness testimony, the county chief of police declared that the truck had never reversed, never hit the boy a second time, and that the wheels never rolled over the child. Meanwhile, one outraged website posted photographs appearing to show the child’s body under the truck’s front wheel.

In each of these cases, despite video and photographs showing that the driver hit the victim a second, and often even a third, fourth, and fifth time, the drivers ended up paying the same or less in compensation and jail time than they would have if they had merely injured the victim.

With so many hit-to-kill drivers escaping serious punishment, the Chinese public has sometimes taken matters into its own hands. In 2013 a crowd in Zhengzhou in Henan province beat a wealthy driver who killed a 6-year-old after allegedly running him over twice. (A television report claims the crowd had acted on “false rumors.” However, at least five witnesses assert on camera that the man had run over the child a second time.)

Of course, not every hit-to-kill driver escapes serious punishment. A man named Yao Jiaxin who in 2010 hit a bicyclist in Xian and returned to make sure she was dead—even stabbing the injured woman with a knife—was convicted and executed. In 2014 a driver named Zhang Qingda who had hit an elderly man in Jiayu Pass in Gansu province with his pickup truck and circled around to crush the man again was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Both China and Taiwan have passed laws attempting to eradicate hit-to-kill cases. Taiwan’s legislature reformed Article 6 of its Civil Code, which had long restricted the ability to bring civil lawsuits on behalf of others (such as a person killed in a traffic accident). Meanwhile, China’s legislature has emphasized that multiple-hit cases should be treated as murders. Yet even when a driver hits a victim multiple times, it can be hard to prove intent and causation—at least to the satisfaction of China’s courts. Judges, police, and media often seem to accept rather unbelievable claims that the drivers hit the victims multiple times accidentally, or that the drivers confused the victims with inanimate objects.



Hit-to-kill cases continue, and hit-to-kill drivers regularly escape serious punishment. In January a woman was caught on video repeatedly driving over an old man who had slipped in the snow. In April a school bus driver in Shuangcheng was accused of driving over a 5-year-old girl again and again. In May a security camera filmed a truck driver running over a young boy four times; the driver claimed that he had never noticed the child.

And last month the unlicensed woman who had killed the 2-year-old in the fruit market with her BMW—and then offered to bribe the family—was brought to court. She claimed the killing was an accident. Prosecutors accepted her assertion, and recommended that the court reduce her sentence to two to four years in prison.

This light sentence would still be more of a punishment than many drivers have received for similar crimes. But it probably won’t be enough to keep the next driver from putting his car in reverse and hitting the gas.



Geoffrey Sant teaches at Fordham Law School, is on the board of the New York Chinese Cultural Center, and is counsel at Dorsey & Whitney LLP.

Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit: China’s laws have encouraged the hit to kill phenomenon.

@aakash_2410 @Nihonjin1051 @ito @gslv mk3 @GURU DUTT
 
Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit.

By Geoffrey Sant


150902_FOR_ChinaPedestrianDeaths.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

Look both ways: Pedestrians wait for the light to change in central Beijing on Sept. 18, 2007.
Photo by Teh Eng Koon/AFP/Getty Images

In April a BMW racing through a fruit market in Foshan in China’s Guangdong province knocked down a 2-year-old girl and rolled over her head. As the girl’s grandmother shouted, “Stop! You’ve hit a child!” the BMW’s driver paused, then switched into reverse and backed up over the girl. The woman at the wheel drove forward once more, crushing the girl for a third time. When she finally got out from the BMW, the unlicensed driver immediately offered the horrified family a deal: “Don’t say that I was driving the car,” she said. “Say it was my husband. We can give you money.”

It seems like a crazy urban legend: In China, drivers who have injured pedestrians will sometimes then try to kill them. And yet not only is it true, it’s fairly common; securitycameras have regularly captured drivers driving back and forth on top of victims to make sure that they are dead. The Chinese language even has an adage for the phenomenon: “It is better to hit to kill than to hit and injure.”

This 2008 television report features security camera footage of a dusty white Passat reversing at high speed and smashing into a 64-year-old grandmother. The Passat’s back wheels bounce up over her head and body. The driver, Zhao Xiao Cheng, stops the car for a moment then hits the gas, causing his front wheels to roll over the woman. Then Zhao shifts into drive, wheels grinding the woman into the pavement. Zhao is not done. Twice more he shifts back and forth between drive and reverse, each time thudding over the grandmother’s body. He then speeds away from her corpse.

Incredibly, Zhao was found not guilty of intentional homicide. Accepting Zhao’s claim that he thought he was driving over a trash bag, the court of Taizhou in Zhejiang province sentenced him to just three years in prison for “negligence.” Zhao’s case was unusual only in that it was caught on video. As the television anchor noted, “You can see online an endless stream of stories talking about cases similar to this one.”

“Double-hit cases” have been around for decades. I first heard of the “hit-to-kill” phenomenon in Taiwan in the mid-1990s when I was working there as an English teacher. A fellow teacher would drive us to classes. After one near-miss of a motorcyclist, he said, “If I hit someone, I’ll hit him again and make sure he’s dead.” Enjoying my shock, he explained that in Taiwan, if you cripple a man, you pay for the injured person’s care for a lifetime. But if you kill the person, you “only have to pay once, like a burial fee.” He insisted he was serious—and that this was common.


Geoffrey Sant wrote about drivers in China who intentionally kill pedestrians. Ask him anything.

Most people agree that the hit-to-kill phenomenon stems at least in part from perverse laws on victim compensation. In China the compensation for killing a victim in a traffic accident is relatively small—amounts typically range from $30,000 to $50,000—and once payment is made, the matter is over. By contrast, paying for lifetime care for a disabled survivor can run into the millions. The Chinese press recently described how one disabled man received about $400,000 for the first 23 years of his care. Drivers who decide to hit-and-kill do so because killing is far more economical. Indeed, Zhao Xiao Cheng—the man caught on a security camera video driving over a grandmother five times—ended up paying only about $70,000 in compensation.

video captured a wealthy young man reversing his BMW X6 out of a parking spot. He hits a 3-year-old boy, knocking the child to the ground and rolling over his skull. The driver then shifts his BMW into drive and crushes the child again. Remarkably, the driver then gets out of the BMW, puts the vehicle in reverse, and guides it with his hand as he walks the vehicle backward over the boy’s crumpled body. The man’s foot is so close to the toddler’s head that, if alive, the boy could have reached out and touched him. The driver then puts the BMW in drive again, running over the boy one last time as he drives away.

Here too, the driver was charged only with accidentally causing a person’s death. (He claimed to have confused the boy with a cardboard box or trash bag.) Police rejected charges of murder and even of fleeing the scene of the crime, ignoring the fact that the driver ran over the boy’s head as he sped away.


These drivers are willing to kill not only because it is cheaper, but also because they expect to escape murder charges. In the days before video cameras became widespread, it was rare to have evidence that a driver hit the victim twice. Even in today’s age of cellphone cameras, drivers seem confident that they can either bribe local officials or hire a lawyer to evade murder charges.

Perhaps the most horrific of these hit-to-kill cases are the ones in which the initial collision didn’t injure the victim seriously, and yet the driver came back and killed the victim anyway. In Sichuan province, an enormous, dirt-encrusted truck knocked down a 2-year-old boy. The toddler was only dazed by the initial blow, and immediately climbed to his feet. Eyewitnesses said that the boy went to fetch his umbrella, which had been thrown across the street by the impact, when the truck reversed and crushed him, this time killing him.

Despite the eyewitness testimony, the county chief of police declared that the truck had never reversed, never hit the boy a second time, and that the wheels never rolled over the child. Meanwhile, one outraged website posted photographs appearing to show the child’s body under the truck’s front wheel.

In each of these cases, despite video and photographs showing that the driver hit the victim a second, and often even a third, fourth, and fifth time, the drivers ended up paying the same or less in compensation and jail time than they would have if they had merely injured the victim.

With so many hit-to-kill drivers escaping serious punishment, the Chinese public has sometimes taken matters into its own hands. In 2013 a crowd in Zhengzhou in Henan province beat a wealthy driver who killed a 6-year-old after allegedly running him over twice. (A television report claims the crowd had acted on “false rumors.” However, at least five witnesses assert on camera that the man had run over the child a second time.)

Of course, not every hit-to-kill driver escapes serious punishment. A man named Yao Jiaxin who in 2010 hit a bicyclist in Xian and returned to make sure she was dead—even stabbing the injured woman with a knife—was convicted and executed. In 2014 a driver named Zhang Qingda who had hit an elderly man in Jiayu Pass in Gansu province with his pickup truck and circled around to crush the man again was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Both China and Taiwan have passed laws attempting to eradicate hit-to-kill cases. Taiwan’s legislature reformed Article 6 of its Civil Code, which had long restricted the ability to bring civil lawsuits on behalf of others (such as a person killed in a traffic accident). Meanwhile, China’s legislature has emphasized that multiple-hit cases should be treated as murders. Yet even when a driver hits a victim multiple times, it can be hard to prove intent and causation—at least to the satisfaction of China’s courts. Judges, police, and media often seem to accept rather unbelievable claims that the drivers hit the victims multiple times accidentally, or that the drivers confused the victims with inanimate objects.



Hit-to-kill cases continue, and hit-to-kill drivers regularly escape serious punishment. In January a woman was caught on video repeatedly driving over an old man who had slipped in the snow. In April a school bus driver in Shuangcheng was accused of driving over a 5-year-old girl again and again. In May a security camera filmed a truck driver running over a young boy four times; the driver claimed that he had never noticed the child.

And last month the unlicensed woman who had killed the 2-year-old in the fruit market with her BMW—and then offered to bribe the family—was brought to court. She claimed the killing was an accident. Prosecutors accepted her assertion, and recommended that the court reduce her sentence to two to four years in prison.

This light sentence would still be more of a punishment than many drivers have received for similar crimes. But it probably won’t be enough to keep the next driver from putting his car in reverse and hitting the gas.



Geoffrey Sant teaches at Fordham Law School, is on the board of the New York Chinese Cultural Center, and is counsel at Dorsey & Whitney LLP.

Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit: China’s laws have encouraged the hit to kill phenomenon.

@aakash_2410 @Nihonjin1051 @ito @gslv mk3 @GURU DUTT
Ooh my God writer went to hell to blame Chinese People no sane person will accept facts mentioned in the above.
 
Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit.

By Geoffrey Sant


150902_FOR_ChinaPedestrianDeaths.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

Look both ways: Pedestrians wait for the light to change in central Beijing on Sept. 18, 2007.
Photo by Teh Eng Koon/AFP/Getty Images

In April a BMW racing through a fruit market in Foshan in China’s Guangdong province knocked down a 2-year-old girl and rolled over her head. As the girl’s grandmother shouted, “Stop! You’ve hit a child!” the BMW’s driver paused, then switched into reverse and backed up over the girl. The woman at the wheel drove forward once more, crushing the girl for a third time. When she finally got out from the BMW, the unlicensed driver immediately offered the horrified family a deal: “Don’t say that I was driving the car,” she said. “Say it was my husband. We can give you money.”

It seems like a crazy urban legend: In China, drivers who have injured pedestrians will sometimes then try to kill them. And yet not only is it true, it’s fairly common; securitycameras have regularly captured drivers driving back and forth on top of victims to make sure that they are dead. The Chinese language even has an adage for the phenomenon: “It is better to hit to kill than to hit and injure.”

This 2008 television report features security camera footage of a dusty white Passat reversing at high speed and smashing into a 64-year-old grandmother. The Passat’s back wheels bounce up over her head and body. The driver, Zhao Xiao Cheng, stops the car for a moment then hits the gas, causing his front wheels to roll over the woman. Then Zhao shifts into drive, wheels grinding the woman into the pavement. Zhao is not done. Twice more he shifts back and forth between drive and reverse, each time thudding over the grandmother’s body. He then speeds away from her corpse.

Incredibly, Zhao was found not guilty of intentional homicide. Accepting Zhao’s claim that he thought he was driving over a trash bag, the court of Taizhou in Zhejiang province sentenced him to just three years in prison for “negligence.” Zhao’s case was unusual only in that it was caught on video. As the television anchor noted, “You can see online an endless stream of stories talking about cases similar to this one.”

“Double-hit cases” have been around for decades. I first heard of the “hit-to-kill” phenomenon in Taiwan in the mid-1990s when I was working there as an English teacher. A fellow teacher would drive us to classes. After one near-miss of a motorcyclist, he said, “If I hit someone, I’ll hit him again and make sure he’s dead.” Enjoying my shock, he explained that in Taiwan, if you cripple a man, you pay for the injured person’s care for a lifetime. But if you kill the person, you “only have to pay once, like a burial fee.” He insisted he was serious—and that this was common.


Geoffrey Sant wrote about drivers in China who intentionally kill pedestrians. Ask him anything.

Most people agree that the hit-to-kill phenomenon stems at least in part from perverse laws on victim compensation. In China the compensation for killing a victim in a traffic accident is relatively small—amounts typically range from $30,000 to $50,000—and once payment is made, the matter is over. By contrast, paying for lifetime care for a disabled survivor can run into the millions. The Chinese press recently described how one disabled man received about $400,000 for the first 23 years of his care. Drivers who decide to hit-and-kill do so because killing is far more economical. Indeed, Zhao Xiao Cheng—the man caught on a security camera video driving over a grandmother five times—ended up paying only about $70,000 in compensation.

video captured a wealthy young man reversing his BMW X6 out of a parking spot. He hits a 3-year-old boy, knocking the child to the ground and rolling over his skull. The driver then shifts his BMW into drive and crushes the child again. Remarkably, the driver then gets out of the BMW, puts the vehicle in reverse, and guides it with his hand as he walks the vehicle backward over the boy’s crumpled body. The man’s foot is so close to the toddler’s head that, if alive, the boy could have reached out and touched him. The driver then puts the BMW in drive again, running over the boy one last time as he drives away.

Here too, the driver was charged only with accidentally causing a person’s death. (He claimed to have confused the boy with a cardboard box or trash bag.) Police rejected charges of murder and even of fleeing the scene of the crime, ignoring the fact that the driver ran over the boy’s head as he sped away.


These drivers are willing to kill not only because it is cheaper, but also because they expect to escape murder charges. In the days before video cameras became widespread, it was rare to have evidence that a driver hit the victim twice. Even in today’s age of cellphone cameras, drivers seem confident that they can either bribe local officials or hire a lawyer to evade murder charges.

Perhaps the most horrific of these hit-to-kill cases are the ones in which the initial collision didn’t injure the victim seriously, and yet the driver came back and killed the victim anyway. In Sichuan province, an enormous, dirt-encrusted truck knocked down a 2-year-old boy. The toddler was only dazed by the initial blow, and immediately climbed to his feet. Eyewitnesses said that the boy went to fetch his umbrella, which had been thrown across the street by the impact, when the truck reversed and crushed him, this time killing him.

Despite the eyewitness testimony, the county chief of police declared that the truck had never reversed, never hit the boy a second time, and that the wheels never rolled over the child. Meanwhile, one outraged website posted photographs appearing to show the child’s body under the truck’s front wheel.

In each of these cases, despite video and photographs showing that the driver hit the victim a second, and often even a third, fourth, and fifth time, the drivers ended up paying the same or less in compensation and jail time than they would have if they had merely injured the victim.

With so many hit-to-kill drivers escaping serious punishment, the Chinese public has sometimes taken matters into its own hands. In 2013 a crowd in Zhengzhou in Henan province beat a wealthy driver who killed a 6-year-old after allegedly running him over twice. (A television report claims the crowd had acted on “false rumors.” However, at least five witnesses assert on camera that the man had run over the child a second time.)

Of course, not every hit-to-kill driver escapes serious punishment. A man named Yao Jiaxin who in 2010 hit a bicyclist in Xian and returned to make sure she was dead—even stabbing the injured woman with a knife—was convicted and executed. In 2014 a driver named Zhang Qingda who had hit an elderly man in Jiayu Pass in Gansu province with his pickup truck and circled around to crush the man again was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Both China and Taiwan have passed laws attempting to eradicate hit-to-kill cases. Taiwan’s legislature reformed Article 6 of its Civil Code, which had long restricted the ability to bring civil lawsuits on behalf of others (such as a person killed in a traffic accident). Meanwhile, China’s legislature has emphasized that multiple-hit cases should be treated as murders. Yet even when a driver hits a victim multiple times, it can be hard to prove intent and causation—at least to the satisfaction of China’s courts. Judges, police, and media often seem to accept rather unbelievable claims that the drivers hit the victims multiple times accidentally, or that the drivers confused the victims with inanimate objects.



Hit-to-kill cases continue, and hit-to-kill drivers regularly escape serious punishment. In January a woman was caught on video repeatedly driving over an old man who had slipped in the snow. In April a school bus driver in Shuangcheng was accused of driving over a 5-year-old girl again and again. In May a security camera filmed a truck driver running over a young boy four times; the driver claimed that he had never noticed the child.

And last month the unlicensed woman who had killed the 2-year-old in the fruit market with her BMW—and then offered to bribe the family—was brought to court. She claimed the killing was an accident. Prosecutors accepted her assertion, and recommended that the court reduce her sentence to two to four years in prison.

This light sentence would still be more of a punishment than many drivers have received for similar crimes. But it probably won’t be enough to keep the next driver from putting his car in reverse and hitting the gas.



Geoffrey Sant teaches at Fordham Law School, is on the board of the New York Chinese Cultural Center, and is counsel at Dorsey & Whitney LLP.

Why drivers in China intentionally kill the pedestrians they hit: China’s laws have encouraged the hit to kill phenomenon.

@aakash_2410 @Nihonjin1051 @ito @gslv mk3 @GURU DUTT
:o: are you sure such things happen in china ?
 
:o: are you sure such things happen in china ?
It's not about my opinion but facts which already happened in the ground. If you become extreme capitalist then money triumphs all law.

India is not any saint either ,look at salman khan case.
 
Can Traffic Cams Keep China's Drivers From Purposely Killing Pedestrians?
Stateside, the red light cams installed at seemingly every major intersection haveyet to prove they’re good for anything beyond tapping driver’s wallets. But an absolutely chilling report about China’s hit-to-kill culture makes us rethink their uses.

Slate‘s Geoffrey Sant has written a horrific essay about how many drivers in China prefer to kill someone rather than merely injure them in a car accident. It’s cold economics. The cost of killing someone in a traffic accident is a one-time payment ranging from $30,000 to $50,000, whereas a lifetime of care for a disabled survivor can cost millions. “It is better to hit to kill than hit and injure,” they say. The result is drivers who re-run over people they hit. In one confirmed case, a driver repeatedly ran over a 2-year-old girl to make sure she was dead, presumably to avoid the risk of paying for her healthcare.

In this culture, having cameras on every street makes complete sense. Gizmodowrote about how a Chinese intersection with 60 security cameras was ridiculed as an obvious way to monitor citizens until the government finally removed a few. But, holy hell, reading that Slate story, is 60 enough?

It might not be! Despite being caught on security footage clearly driving his Passat back and forth over a 64-year-old grandmother multiple times back in 2008, driver Zhao Xiao Cheng was found not guilty of intentional homicide. He claimed he thought he was running over trash bags and was sentenced to just three years for negligence. China will need reforms to its sentencing practices and no doubt to its insurance system to take all the incentive out of killing the wounded. But for the immediate future, traffic cams, cell phone cams, and dash cams might be the best defense against that second, third, and fourth return to the spot of an accident.
Can Traffic Cams Keep China's Drivers From Purposely Killing Pedestrians? | Inverse
 
It's not about my opinion but facts which already happened in the ground. If you become extreme capitalist then money triumphs all law.

India is not any saint either ,look at salman khan case.
thats realli sad cause india is a poor and laregelli uneducated and unorganised with serous behavioural and disciplanarry issues but it is a shock to see such things in china which isan educated , well mannerrs, and largelli disciplinned society of hard working & organised people ... this is a very sad thing to know
 
Can Traffic Cams Keep China's Drivers From Purposely Killing Pedestrians?
Stateside, the red light cams installed at seemingly every major intersection haveyet to prove they’re good for anything beyond tapping driver’s wallets. But an absolutely chilling report about China’s hit-to-kill culture makes us rethink their uses.

Slate‘s Geoffrey Sant has written a horrific essay about how many drivers in China prefer to kill someone rather than merely injure them in a car accident. It’s cold economics. The cost of killing someone in a traffic accident is a one-time payment ranging from $30,000 to $50,000, whereas a lifetime of care for a disabled survivor can cost millions. “It is better to hit to kill than hit and injure,” they say. The result is drivers who re-run over people they hit. In one confirmed case, a driver repeatedly ran over a 2-year-old girl to make sure she was dead, presumably to avoid the risk of paying for her healthcare.

In this culture, having cameras on every street makes complete sense. Gizmodowrote about how a Chinese intersection with 60 security cameras was ridiculed as an obvious way to monitor citizens until the government finally removed a few. But, holy hell, reading that Slate story, is 60 enough?

It might not be! Despite being caught on security footage clearly driving his Passat back and forth over a 64-year-old grandmother multiple times back in 2008, driver Zhao Xiao Cheng was found not guilty of intentional homicide. He claimed he thought he was running over trash bags and was sentenced to just three years for negligence. China will need reforms to its sentencing practices and no doubt to its insurance system to take all the incentive out of killing the wounded. But for the immediate future, traffic cams, cell phone cams, and dash cams might be the best defense against that second, third, and fourth return to the spot of an accident.
Can Traffic Cams Keep China's Drivers From Purposely Killing Pedestrians? | Inverse
Traffic cams is the way to reduce those heinous crime.

thats realli sad cause india is a poor and laregelli uneducated and unorganised with serous behavioural and disciplanarry issues but it is a shock to see such things in china which isan educated , well mannerrs, and largelli disciplinned society of hard working & organised people ... this is a very sad thing to know
I don't know if you are trying to troll or trolling o_O

But :coffee:
 
Traffic cams is the way to reduce those heinous crime.


I don't know if you are trying to troll or trolling o_O

But :coffee:
Defiantly Mr. Guru is trying to troll.

In China sentences in such type of crimes very harsh even death but shock to know still people don't bother.
 
Traffic cams is the way to reduce those heinous crime.


I don't know if you are trying to troll or trolling o_O

But :coffee:
im not trolling chinese wherever you go are very hard working and highli organised and disciplinned race maybe even better than japs + they have a very strong goverment and its security institutions not like free for all in indian context no sir im not trolling and i never could have imagined for such a thing in china i cross my heart on that realli im not trolling

Defiantly Mr. Guru is trying to troll.

In China sentences in such type of crimes very harsh even death but shock to know still people don't bother.
have some shame razpak/al-asad-al-arab or al-asad-al-mulk/lastofpatriots dont bother me or replay to me ... thanks
 
Defiantly Mr. Guru is trying to troll.

In China sentences in such type of crimes very harsh even death but shock to know still people don't bother.
I think when people become Rich suddenly then they tend to get boost in egos and think poor and lower middle class people are just waste of space.

They think anything can be bought or solved by money so hence this attitude.
 
im not trolling chinese wherever you go are very hard working and highli organised and disciplinned race maybe even better than japs + they have a very strong goverment and its security institutions not like free for all in indian context no sir im not trolling and i never could have imagined for such a thing in china i cross my heart on that realli im not trolling


have some shame razpak/al-asad-al-arab or al-asad-al-mulk/lastofpatriots dont bother me or replay to me ... thanks
I am not razpak
 
im not trolling chinese wherever you go are very hard working and highli organised and disciplinned race maybe even better than japs + they have a very strong goverment and its security institutions not like free for all in indian context no sir im not trolling and i never could have imagined for such a thing in china i cross my heart on that realli im not trolling

Ok i believe you yes Chinese are very hard working people but don;t you think this people are the reason as they work non-stop for those rich people whose wife's or children killing them in pedestrian then trying to hide their crime with tons of money.

this is just wrong in so many levels. :|
 
It is , indeed, unfortunate to see and read reports on the Chinese vehicular homicide problem. Let's hope it is rectified.
 
Fatalities may occur more often in 'less developed' countries.
in the developed countries with high incomes, typically 10 to 30% of fatalities related to road traffic accidents (RTAs) are pedestrians. Meanwhile, substantially higher pedestrian fatal proportions were reported in the other countries with middle or low-incomes, despite the figures are underestimated.
...
Few studies have been performed to investigate the characters of fatal pedestrian accidents, especially
for the middle and low income countries, e.g. China, although fatal pedestrian accidents occur very frequently in these countries
Analysis of 121 fatal passenger car-adult pedestrian accidents in China - ResearchGate

Meanwhile, equally disturbing
Watching traffic deaths at teatime – Beijing

The traffic volume in Beijing is appalling, and the quality of drivers even worse. A graphic new show called “Traffic Light” aims to educate road users that they’re not invincible.
The BTV show brutally depicts the most grisly traffic accidents, replaying them in slow motion, and again in close up. Throughout this, police officers give play-by-play commentary with slide-shows and computer graphics, like a nasty version of Sky Sports half-time Rugby analysis.
Aired four times a day, including a breakfast and tea-time edition, the show is intended to teach Beijing’s 4.8 million drivers that it would help if they followed the rules of the road, or at least kept one eye on where they’re going.
The show is very graphic – pedestrians are hit by taxis, cyclists go under the wheels of buses and the host sits grinning throughout. Photos of the aftermath are all too common, and linger on grieving children kneeling round the crushed remains of their parents, or close-ups of the worst injuries.
According to the government, almost 70,000 people died in more than 265,000 road accidents in China in 2009 – around 190 fatalities a day. Police claim this is a huge reduction from 99,000 deaths in 2005, but the World Health Organisation estimates that the real figures for last year are nearly double those released by the authorities.
Here’s a full episode of Traffic Light. It’s deeply unpleasant. People get killed and maimed in close-up and the camera doesn’t pull away at the last minute, so don’t watch if you’ve got a weak stomach. If you do decide to watch it, note the reaction of passing pedestrians – it’s more annoyance at being held up than horror at what has just happened:

[article has videoclip here]

On the way back from the supermarket today I saw a collision between a cement mixer truck and a small, home-made tricycle. The remains of the tricycle were scattered across the junction, and the drivers head still lodged under the rear wheels of the truck. Not having much to offer in the way of assistance I kept out of the way, but rather than call an ambulance most passers by were using their phones to snap photos.
Traffic here is dangerous, whether you’re a pedestrian, or wrapped up in a car. It seems that with the boom in wealth and the huge migration from the country, people who haven’t passed a driving test and are more used to tractors in empty fields are now cluelessly driving SUVs down pedestrian only pavements. At the same time, pedestrians don’t look where they’re going, or walk blithely into traffic whilst wearing headphones.

Hot Wheels
To be fair, today’s incident was the first fatal accident I’ve seen, but bumps and scrapes are all too common for drivers, and in some cases even worse. We saw this burning van on the way back from Cuandixia. The driver had escaped but the police were helpless to extingush the flames
Traffic Accident TV show in Beijing | You're Not From Around Here, Are You?

Apparently there is some debate over who's fault it is or should be if a pedestrian gets killed
Who Is Responsible for Pedestrian Accidents? -- Beijing Review
 
It is , indeed, unfortunate to see and read reports on the Chinese vehicular homicide problem. Let's hope it is rectified.

There are fcukers in all countries.

A woman could afford a bmw but behaves so badly = newly rich but poorly cultivated character.

She just earned herself a death sentence.
 
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