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Shine a light: Chinese police crack down on headlight misuse
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 09, 2014


China's July auto sales up 6.7%: industry group
Beijing (AFP) Aug 08, 2014 - Auto sales in China, the world's biggest car market, accelerated in July, growing 6.7 percent to 1.62 million vehicles, an industry group said Friday.

For the first seven months of 2014, auto sales reached 13.30 million vehicles, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said in a statement, up 8.2 percent on the same period last year.

China has become critically important to foreign carmakers, given the size of the market and weak sales elsewhere in the world.

China's full-year auto sales hit 21.98 million vehicles last year, when a recovery in Japanese brands offset the impact of slowing economic growth.

US auto maker General Motors said Wednesday that its sales increased 12.7 percent in July from the same period last year to 249,734 vehicles.

GM's China sales also rose 10.7 percent to 1.98 million vehicles in the first seven months of the year, the company said in a statement.

It also said that on Wednesday its annual sales in China, its biggest market, had reached two million vehicles for this year.

That marked "the fifth consecutive year and the earliest ever that GM has reached the milestone", it said in the statement.

"We will continue to expand our portfolio and introduce more product offerings in China to meet increasingly diverse demand in our largest market," GM China president Matt Tsien said in the statement.

US automaker Ford's China sales, meanwhile, rose 25 percent to 90,775 vehicles in July from the same month last year, the company said Friday.

In the first seven months, sales rose 33 percent from the same period last year, Ford said in a statement. In July, Ford's China sales increased 33 percent to 640,031 vehicles, it said.

Using the age-old reasoning of making the punishment fit the crime, police in a sprawling Chinese metropolis are making drivers who inappropriately flash their bright lights suffer the same agony.

In a post on their official account on Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, traffic police in the southern city of Shenzhen said that violators were being made to look at bright headlights for five minutes.

The post described it as an "appropriate experience" that would make offenders "sense the harm" such use of their headlights could cause.

"From now on, traffic police will make those found carelessly using bright lights to look at them for five minutes," said the post, dated Tuesday.

Violators also have to listen to a police explanation on properly using headlights and pay a fine of 300 yuan ($49), the post said.

It included a photo of a man sitting on a red plastic stool looking into the bright lights of what appeared to be a police vehicle with a uniformed officer standing nearby.

Automobile use has boomed in China along with the country's rapid economic growth, which has vaulted it to become the world's second-largest economy and the globe's biggest car market.

Auto sales accelerated in July, growing 6.7 percent to 1.62 million vehicles, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said Friday.

For the first seven months of 2014, sales reached 13.30 million vehicles, up 8.2 percent on the same period last year, the industry group said.

China's full-year auto sales hit 21.98 million vehicles last year.

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