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Sunday, December 10, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

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Latest edict bans motorcycles

McClatchy Newspapers

GUANGZHOU, China — When officials decided that swarms of motorcycles and scooters had become a plague on the streets of this huge city, they didn't wobble in their course of action.

The solution? Ban motorcycles.

As of Jan. 1, the city's 260,000 or so registered motorcycles will be forced off the roads. Tens of thousands of people who use the vehicles to make deliveries or otherwise earn livings must turn in their motorcycles or take them out of the city.

After six decades in control, Communist officials are accustomed to issuing sweeping draconian edicts believing they are acting for the benefit of all. Angry citizens simply accept what the one-party state decides to hand to them.

Recent days have provided other examples. On Dec. 1, Shanghai shut its Pudong international airport with no warning, rerouting or turning back domestic and international flights for several hours. The reason for the rare closure was deemed a state secret. Some media hinted that it might have been for an anti-terrorism drill.

A day later, 10,000 homes in Urumqi, the largest city in far west China, were left without heat for four days in subfreezing temperatures. A coal-fired boiler blew out because the city had bought substandard coal. As some residents rushed to buy electric heaters, the power utility said it would proceed with scheduled power outages Dec. 4-8 to upgrade its system, leaving masses of residents not only shivering but also without power.

Beijing maintains a firm grip in many areas of life, such as a one-child policy for most families. In rural areas, where unrest is rising, farmers largely have protested over land seizures, often because they think corruption is involved.

Many Chinese see their lives improve on the crest of steady economic growth, and that has given them patience, political scientists say.

Even so, officials show little concern for the inconvenience they cause.

"These guys have no sense of civil rights. There's no consultation," said Joseph Cheng, a political scientist at the City University of Hong Kong. "They don't have this belief that stakeholder rights have to be respected. They just have this abstract sense of the public good."

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One of the most recent examples is in Guangzhou, formerly known as Canton, the center of an industrial zone that manufactures everything from cars to golf clubs.

The city is China's fifth-largest auto market, with 900,000 vehicles jamming its roads. Adding to traffic problems, motorcycle and scooter prices have plunged, causing throngs of residents to eagerly turn to two-wheeled motorized transport. Apart from the 260,000 registered motorcycles, another 100,000 unregistered ones ply the streets, as well as 100,000 or so electric bicycles.

City officials blame exhaust-spewing motorcycles for increased pollution and other problems. Motorcycles were involved in about half the city's accidents last year, when crashes left 311 people dead, according to the public security office, and snatch-and-run gangs of thieves menace pedestrians. Through the first nine months of this year, police tallied 3,432 cases of robbers using motorcycles.

Guangzhou isn't the first city in China to ban or sharply limit motorcycles, scooters and electric bikes. Shanghai and Beijing also do so to some degree. But Guangzhou is taking action after hundreds of thousands of consumers have already bought the vehicles.

Guangzhou authorities are offering some compensation, depending on the age of the motorcycle or scooter, often amounting to $100 to $200. Owners also receive about $8 for the scrap value of their vehicles. Officials say they'll give some job training to those who needed their motorcycles to earn livings, but they haven't provided details.

Some citizens are dubious of the reasons for the ban, wondering if officials are seeking to promote public transportation or stimulate car sales.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

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