| Two wheels bad |
| Society + Culture | ||||||||
| By Step Vaessen | ||||||||
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Four wheels good
A motorcycle taxi driver who has been in Guangzhou for three years told Al Jazeera he would now have to leave town to find another job. But not everyone has complied with the new law. A handful of motorcycle taxis were seen operating after Monday's ban came into effect. Distress sale The ban has also created a second-hand market where owners are forced to sell old and even new machines at low prices to farmers from out of town. Small traders complained they were suffering losses because they were unable to transport supplies cheaply after being forced to sell their motorcycles which, if unsold, will be officially confiscated after two weeks. Although not everyone in Guangzhou believes that pollution is the main reason for the ban, nobody dares to openly complain, and people have given up on their bikes for fear of the law. But some city dwellers said they could already feel a difference only a few days after the ban. One resident said: "The air quality has improved and there is less noise. The outlook of the city is completely new. I am sure it will get even better over the weeks to come." Quote this article on your site | Views: 2036
1. 08-01-2007 05:06 class war Missed in the article of motor bike banning was the class issue: only the poorer working class people buy motor bikes because they cannot afford cars. Motor bikes are the least of the polluters, the rich people driving SUVs perhaps top the list. Get the class war here? The rich can't be slammed: they are either business sector and therefore high dollar income (and taxes) or government people. Buses could have been hit with something... like turning the non-electric buses into electric ones. As to the gov't report on pollution...obviously none of those people have been to Lanzhou out in far northwest Gansu province where the pollution settles in in Sept and blue sky is not seen until May. I know. I lived there. I couldn't breathe after walking 100 metres during the winter. Here in Guangzhou, though things are bad, I can breathe--and there's an occasional wind to blow the sky clear. There's alot missing, then, and alot that's going on beneath the surface that should be dealt with, rather than just reporting "he said, they said, someone said." Guest Write Comment
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