Cao Siqi
Screenshot from Sina Weibo
A non-governmental organization focused on environmental protection
filed a lawsuit on Wednesday against a local bureau of China Railway for
setting up smoking areas on trains with slower services, the Global
Times has learned.
According to Beijing's No.4 Intermediate
People's Court, the NGO, China Biodiversity Conservation and Green
Development Foundation sued the Lanzhou bureau in Northwest China's
Gansu Province under China Railway for setting up a smoking area and
providing cigarette utensils on trains with slower services despite the
national move to ban smoking on high speed trains.
It is the country's first public interest litigation case since the Civil Code came into force on January 1, the court said.
The
NGO told the Global Times on Wednesday that from the beginning of 2019
to January 2020, many passengers reported to the organization that when
taking children on ordinary trains, they often encountered smokers in
the smoking area and carriage junction without any supervision,
resulting in extremely poor air quality.
"Our field
investigations showed that two trains passing by stations in Beijing,
Shacheng, Xuanhua and Zhangjiakou in North China's Hebei Province have
not only allowed passengers to smoke in the designated areas, but also
in sleeping and washing areas. Many minors could be spotted on the
trains," a staff member from the NGO said.
A portable air
monitor showed that the air pollution index in the middle of the train
doubled when someone was smoking at the train entrance, with the PM2.5
reading 9.66 times higher than when no one was smoking, the staff member
said.
Smoking section on trains. Photo: Courtesy of China Biodiversity Conservation and Green Development Foundation
The case is currently ongoing.
Since 2018, nearly 90 percent of
Chinese railways have been subject to anti-smoking regulations, but
enforcement remains poor, particularly on slower services.
State
and local tobacco control policies require that station waiting areas,
platforms and train cars must be smoke free. But compliance is far from
satisfactory, according to research released by the tobacco control
department of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Currently,
21 cities in China ban smoking in indoor public areas. Another five
cities have prohibited tobacco use on public transportation, according
to media reports.
China prohibits smoking on airlines and
high-speed trains, but slower trains that carry more than one-third of
the total 3 billion train passengers in China still have smokers on a
daily basis, according to the Chinese Association on Tobacco Control.
Original article:
http://enapp.globaltimes.cn/#/article/1212054