Advertisement
Advertisement
Hong Kong transport
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Footage online shows a woman riding a suspected e-bike while carrying three children, all without helmets. Photo: Facebook/香港交通突發報料區

Hong Kong police arrest woman for allegedly riding e-bike with 3 helmetless children as passengers

  • Woman arrested for eight traffic-related offences, the second such case within a week after police detained another resident over riding e-bike with two children
  • Most recent arrest prompted by footage showing a woman riding suspected e-bicycle carrying two girls and a boy as they cross road packed with moving vehicles
Hong Kong police have arrested a 34-year-old woman for eight traffic-related offences after she allegedly rode a suspected e-bike with three helmetless children as passengers and ignored road signals.

It was the second such case within a week, with the force arresting a woman, 37, last Friday on suspicion of riding an e-bicycle along a pavement while carrying two children.

Police said officers from the New Territories North traffic unit arrested a woman, 34, on Monday in Tin Shui Wai after an online video showed a rider on a suspected e-bike with a boy and two girls travelling along Tin Tan Street in Tin Shui Wai.

In the footage, a woman can be seen ignoring traffic signals while crossing Tin Shui Road.

The clip also shows a boy and one of the girls sitting in front of the rider, while the other child is positioned behind her as they try to cross a road packed with moving vehicles. The woman and children are not wearing helmets.

The woman was charged with eight offences, including dangerous driving, driving without a licence, driving a motorcycle on a pedestrian path, riding without wearing a protective helmet and illegally carrying a passenger under the age of eight.

She has been granted bail and told to report to police by the end of June.

Police stressed that “electric mobility devices should not be used on the same road as regular vehicles, nor should they be used on pedestrian paths or cycling tracks”.

The force warned that anyone driving such a device without a vehicle registration licence could be in breach of the Road Traffic Ordinance, among other laws.

According to the ordinance, a mechanically or electrically propelled bicycle is classified as a motorised vehicle.

In Hong Kong, driving a powered mobility device without a registration licence is punishable by up to 12 months in prison and a HK$10,000 (US$1,280) fine.

Post