drunk driving - Tin tức mới nhất hàng đầu Việt Nam cập nhật liên tục 24h https://dathoavina.com/tag/drunk-driving Fri, 14 Jun 2019 13:21:56 +0000 vi hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 New law to show zero tolerance for alcohol while driving https://dathoavina.com/new-law-to-show-zero-tolerance-for-alcohol-while-driving.html https://dathoavina.com/new-law-to-show-zero-tolerance-for-alcohol-while-driving.html#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2019 13:21:56 +0000 https://dathoavina.com/?p=471 Any amount of alcohol within a person’s system means that person is not allowed to drive any vehicle, according to a newly-passed bill to prevent alcohol’s harmful effects. Photo by Shutterstock/Dean Drobot Any amount of alcohol found in a person’s system will result in his/her driving license being revoked, under a new Vietnam law. The […]

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New law to show zero tolerance for alcohol while driving

Any amount of alcohol within a person’s system means that person is not allowed to drive any vehicle, according to a newly-passed bill to prevent alcohol’s harmful effects. Photo by Shutterstock/Dean Drobot

Any amount of alcohol found in a person’s system will result in his/her driving license being revoked, under a new Vietnam law.

The bill on Preventing Alcohol’s Harmful Effects was passed by the National Assembly Friday with 408 out of 450 delegates voting in favor.

Last week, lawmakers were presented with two options for the bill: banning the sale of all alcoholic drinks from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. every day; and banning those found with alcohol content in their blood or breath from driving on the streets. Both options failed to receive majority votes from the delegates.

The Standing Committee of the National Assembly, in a presentation before the voting Friday morning, stressed that the banning of people found with alcohol in their systems from driving was necessary, in light of the increasing number of traffic accidents involving drunk driving.

“As such, the Standing Committee sincerely requests the National Assembly to include the ban [in the bill],” said Nguyen Thuy Anh, head of the Committee on Social Issues.

The bill would go into effect starting 2020.

Alcohol, especially beer, is widely consumed in Vietnam. Data collected by the Ministry of Health shows Vietnamese citizens consumed 305 million liters of liquor and 4.1 billion liters of beer in 2017, making it the biggest alcohol consumer in Southeast Asia and third biggest in Asia after Japan and China.

Vietnamese men also consume the most alcohol in the world, drinking over five standard drinks a day, meaning 50 grams of alcohol, on average, according to the 2016 Global Burden of Disease Study.

The country spends on average $3.4 billion on alcohol each year, or 3 percent of the government’s budget revenue, according to official data. The figure translates to $300 per capita, while spending on health averages $113 per person, according to the Ministry of Health.

40 percent of traffic accidents in Vietnam are linked to excessive drinking, according to the WHO, which it said is an alarming rate for a country where road crashes kill a person every hour, on average.

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Vietnam rages against drunk driving as death toll mounts https://dathoavina.com/vietnam-rages-against-drunk-driving-as-death-toll-mounts.html https://dathoavina.com/vietnam-rages-against-drunk-driving-as-death-toll-mounts.html#respond Mon, 27 May 2019 07:32:09 +0000 http://jesvietnam.com/?p=330 Social media was shaken by the image of a boy weeping in front of his dead mother on a street after a recent accident. Le Thi Thu Ha, a Hanoi sanitation worker, had been hit by a car on the night of April 22. She had been cleaning a street in the capital when a […]

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Social media was shaken by the image of a boy weeping in front of his dead mother on a street after a recent accident.

Le Thi Thu Ha, a Hanoi sanitation worker, had been hit by a car on the night of April 22.

She had been cleaning a street in the capital when a drunk driver lost control of his car and slammed into her. The alcohol level in his breath was very high, and he was not sober enough to talk to the police until the next morning.

Another accident a week later claimed two lives when a drunk driver crashed his car into two motorbikes. He admitted he had drunk six beers and alcohol with friends before the accident.

Official data shows there were over 4,000 traffic accidents in the country in the first quarter of 2019, leading to 1,905 deaths. Drunk driving was to blame in 274 accidents.

Alarmingly, the number of drivers exceeding alcohol limits is increasing, according to statistics from the traffic police department.

Last year over 91,000 drivers had received sanctions for drunk driving, but in just four months this year the number is 50,000, a 45 percent increase over the same period last year.

A survey found that 90 percent of people drive after drinking alcohol despite knowing it is illegal, Tran Huu Minh, a representative of the National Traffic Safety Committee, said.

Experts said the lenient penalties for drunk driving are also to blame.

The increasing number of drunk drivers shows that “legal punishments are not strong enough to deter the behavior,” Phan Thi Thu Hien, deputy director of the Directorate for Roads of Vietnam, said.

Public outcry

Heartbreaking images and the fatal consequences of some recent drunk driving accidents have caused a wave of public anger on social media.

Thousands of people have been expressing great apprehension about going in traffic every day. A reader wrote on VnExpress: “Going out is now frightening; at any time, in any place we could be hit from behind by a car.”

“Drunk driving is no different from holding a knife to kill people,” another reader wrote.

Following an accident that killed two people on April 30 many Facebook users began an online campaign against drunk driving. They put up profile pictures with slogans like “Don’t drive when you are drunk” to tell the community about the deadly consequences of the action.

A Facebook user named Hai Phuong uploaded a picture of her with a placard against drunken driving, saying: “Driving after using drugs and alcohol is a crime. People who deliberately drive when inebriated will sooner or later become murderers.”

Besides, the Vietnamese drinking culture seems to bother many people. At almost any gathering or meeting, drinking alcohol has become a sine qua non, especially for men, and refusing a drink could even be considered impolite.

The belief that business negotiations tend to be smoother over a few drinks is well entrenched.

Vietnam is the biggest beer market in Southeast Asia, consuming nearly four billion liters in 2017. The country spends on average $3.4 billion a year on alcohol.

Vietnamese consumed 8.9 liters of pure alcohol per person in 2017, surpassing Japan (7.9 liters), China (7.4 liters) and India (5.9 liters).

A netizen expressed disapproval of the old custom where people sometimes have no choice but to drink. “Stop forcing others to drink and stop letting others force you to drink,” she wrote. “Customs are what people create, so we have to stop the harmful ones.”

The anger is spilling over into the real world. Early this month, 8,000 people marched against drunk driving in central Hanoi.

Some of the organizers were friends of car crash victims and decided to march to demand a change in drinking habits.

“We just lost two friends in an accident caused by a drunk driver,” Nguyen Duc Hiep, a participant, said. The sadness at the friends’ death was manifesting into determination to oppose drunk driving, he said.

Many people have begun to call for more stringent punishment for offenders.

“I strongly recommend that we should permanently confiscate the licenses of people driving while under the influence,” a reader wrote into an online newspaper recently.

In response to the public outcry, the Ministry of Transport is planning amendments to laws like increasing the fine and duration of license suspension, Le Van Thanh of the ministry’s department of traffic safety, said.

People are also calling for a change in the public attitude toward drinking.

“If we don’t want to drink, no one can squeeze your mouth open and pour alcohol into it,” Bao Thanh, a participant in the march against drunk driving, wrote.

“So improve your own awareness for the safety of your family and the community.”Vietnamese

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