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With traffic deaths on the rise, Hong Kong gets 40 new red light cameras

Police figures show 122 people died in 117 fatal traffic accidents last year

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Motorists who fail to comply with traffic signals face a HK$5,000 fine and three months’ imprisonment for a first offence. Photo: SCMP Pictures

Forty new red light cameras are in place across Hong Kong, with the city recording an 18 per cent rise in the number of fatal traffic accidents, which claimed the lives of 122 people last year.

This has brought the total number of red light cameras to 195, placing relevantroad junctions in the city under 24-hour surveillance.

“The 40 new red light cameras commenced operation by the Hong Kong Police Force from [Wednesday] to enhance road safety and strengthen the deterrent effect against red light jumping,” a Transport Department spokeswoman said.

Where the new red-light cameras have been installed

She said the government had chosen the camera locations based on the prevalence of red light jumping activities and accident records. Particular attention was paid to areas where accidents involved drivers disobeying traffic signals.

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Other factors were a need for even distribution of red light cameras to deter violations city-wide, the spokeswoman added, as well as a preliminary assessment of the suitability of a given location for installing such a camera.

The 40 locations included the junction of Castle Peak Road and Lam Tei Main Street in Tuen Mun, where an elderly woman was killed when she was hit by a truck in 1995.

READ MORE: Newly-licensed driver arrested after ‘ploughing into police car in illegal race’ in Hong Kong

Another new camera was installed at the junction of Fung Chi Road and Wang Tat Road in Yuen Long, near the site of a 2007 fatal traffic accident in which a minibus allegedly ran a red light before knocking down and killing a cyclist at the junction of Fung Chi and Long Ping Road. Separately, in 1997, a taxi driver died after his vehicle ploughed into railings at Fung Chi Road.

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