City offers to look after children traveling home
An eastern Chinese city is offering to escort the children of migrant workers home free of charge as the world’s largest annual human migration begins ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year.
A bus station in Shandong Province’s Qingdao said non-local parents could apply for the “children mail” service if they are too busy before the festival to attend to children who have already begun their winter vacation from school.
Some parents opt to send their children to their hometowns in advance so they can be with other family members back home, and the new service allows the children to travel under the care of bus drivers and stewards, said Jiang Shiqun, Party secretary of the bus station.
Staff on the bus will exchange “codes” with the relatives waiting to pick up the children to ensure they don’t end up in the wrong hands. Bus station staff will also keep an eye on the children via cameras on the buses, Jiang said.
Tan Hongwei, a seafood shop assistant who applied for the service at the Qingdao station, hoped to send his 12-year-old son to their home in Jinan City.
“The month before the lunar new year is usually a busy time for us. In the past, my son had to stay home and had nobody cooking for him or taking care of him,” Tan said.
The service covers 14 long-distance bus lines in the province, and the station has safely transported 12 children so far this year.
Every year, legions of students and migrant workers journey home for the Lunar New Year, the most important time for family reunions, and road and railway systems are stretched to breaking point.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 娌狪CP璇侊細娌狪CP澶05050403鍙-1
- |
- 浜掕仈缃戞柊闂讳俊鎭湇鍔¤鍙瘉锛31120180004
- |
- 缃戠粶瑙嗗惉璁稿彲璇侊細0909346
- |
- 骞挎挱鐢佃鑺傜洰鍒朵綔璁稿彲璇侊細娌瓧绗354鍙
- |
- 澧炲肩數淇′笟鍔$粡钀ヨ鍙瘉锛氭勃B2-20120012
Copyright 漏 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.