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Chinese police have arrested 4,669 people for scalping train tickets ahead of
the Spring Festival, or the Chinese New Year, which falls on Feb. 14, the
Ministry of Public Security said Monday.
Since Jan. 21 when the crackdown was launched, police have confiscated more
than 20,000 tickets, the ministry said.
In Guangdong, a pilot province for the real-name train ticket selling system,
police captured 837 illegal ticket vendors and confiscated more than 2,500
scalped tickets.
The new system was designed to prevent ticket scalping with passengers
required to show ID when booking their ticket. It was initially adopted for
trains running between Guangdong and the inland provinces of Hunan, Sichuan and
Guizhou and Chongqing Municipality, the home provinces of millions of
Guangdong's migrant workers who rush home for the Spring Festival holiday every
year.
Police with the Ministry of Railways (MOR) public security department are
also checking the Internet for scalpers touting tickets.
In the past week, the MOR police cracked 257 cases of illegal ticket dealing
on the Internet and arrested 286 scalpers.
The MOR estimates 210 million passengers will travel during the 40-day rush
period beginning Jan. 30, up 9.5 percent from a year
earlier. |