回到
Oct 25, 2025

Hong Kong police issue 31 summonses in seat-belt sting on green minibuses

Hong Kong police issue 31 summonses in seat-belt sting on green minibuses
In the early hours of 25 October 2025, undercover officers from the Kowloon East Traffic Enforcement & Control Division boarded multiple 16-seat “green” public light buses, catching 31 passengers who failed to fasten their seat belts. Viral mobile-phone footage shows a plain-clothes officer standing up mid-journey, announcing the operation and counting unbelted riders before uniformed colleagues boarded to verify identity cards.

Although Hong Kong has required seat-belt use on public light buses since 2012, compliance has been patchy, especially during short-hop urban runs popular with commuters and foreign domestic workers. Each offender now faces a fixed penalty of HK$5,000 and three driving-offence demerit points (passengers accumulate demerits that can lead to mandatory safety courses). Operators that fail to maintain functional belts risk having route licences suspended.

For employers managing duty-of-care obligations, the crackdown is a timely reminder that local ground-transport rules form part of corporate travel risk. Companies are updating travel handbooks to include mandatory belt-usage reminders for staff relocating within Hong Kong. Insurers note that failure to comply could void personal-accident coverage in the event of injury.

Transport scholars say enforcement is being stepped up ahead of the Christmas travel surge, when minibus ridership climbs 12 %. The Transport Department is testing telematics that alert drivers if belts remain unclicked for 30 seconds after movement—technology that could become mandatory in next year’s vehicle-inspection cycle.

The move dovetails with broader government efforts to cut road-fatality rates below 1 per 100,000 residents by 2030, aligning Hong Kong with leading OECD benchmarks. While the operation targets domestic routes, safer first- and last-mile connections also support Hong Kong’s aspiration to be an Asia-Pacific mobility hub for tourists and expatriate assignees.
×