China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Petition seeks more travel help for visually impaired

- By HE DAN hedan@chinadaily.com.cn Jiang Mengyun contribute­d to the story.

Blind people are having to wait longer for buses, and can even risk their lives taking a journey in China’s cities, according to a petition signed by more than 400 visually impaired individual­s and activists and sent to public transporta­tion authoritie­s in six major cities on Thursday.

The petition calls for more user-friendly conditions for the country’s 12.6 million visually impaired about a year after China introduced a law requiring such access.

Wang Rui, a blind activist from Qingdao, Shandong province, said the difficulti­es she faces in daily life prompted her to launch the campaign.

“I am a very independen­t person, but I find it impossible to get on the bus I need without others’ help,” the 28-yearold said.

“There is no broadcast system for buses in Qingdao, so I never know whether the coming bus is the one I want or not,,” she said.

Wang said she collected 402 electronic signatures from blind people and their families nationwide for the petition.

Fu Long, a blind massager from Zhengzhou, Henan province, said taking commuter buses between his home and workplace is an adventure.

“Buses usually stop outside the bike lane and I have to cross the lane to get on the bus, so I often get hit by bikes,” he said.

When he finally makes it on a bus, Fu faces other awkward situations, such as falling or knocking people over when the bus moves on a bumpy road.

The Chinese government has paid more attention to helping people with disabiliti­es use public transporta­tion since 2012, when the State Council issued regulation­s on providing more user-friendly facilities.

Several cities, including Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu and Fuzhou, have piloted an audio guiding system for the blind on a limited number of buses.

Chen Zhaoxi, a salesperso­n in Shenzhen, said he can easily get on a bus with the help of a sensor applicatio­n on his cellphone. With a special cellphone, Chen can hear the audio guide, which tells him the number and route of an approachin­g bus.

When he hears his bus is coming, he presses a button that will send a wireless signal to the bus installed with the audio guiding system. Then the external speaker will send out a prompter to remind the driver to wait for a blind passenger. Chen can follow the audio instructio­ns that tell him the position of the bus and how to get on it.

Li Weihong, vice-chairman of the China Blind Persons’ Associatio­n, said the difficulty blind people have getting on the right bus is one of the biggest complaints he has heard from blind people in most cities.

Li urged city government­s to include the cost of installing audio guiding systems for the blind in government budgets. Such systems usually cost around 700 yuan ($114) for each bus.

“For city like Beijing, there are more than 20,000 buses. The cost is not small, so the government should think about subsidizin­g publictran­sportation companies for installing audio guiding systems for the blind, and providing a free remote control or free cellphone applicatio­ns to blind people to make a barrier-free environmen­t a reality for all,” he said.

 ?? CUI MENG / CHINA DAILY ?? Wang Ying, a blind Beijing resident, exits a bus in the capital on Thursday, the National Eye Health Day.
CUI MENG / CHINA DAILY Wang Ying, a blind Beijing resident, exits a bus in the capital on Thursday, the National Eye Health Day.

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