Japan city aims to ban phone use while walking

People using smartphones has rapidly increased and so have the number of accidents

Last updated:
2 MIN READ
1/11
It is a scene repeated the world over: pedestrians glued to their phones while walking, causing collisions and sometimes accidents. No more, says one Japanese city.
AFP
2/11
Officials in Yamato city, near Tokyo, on Monday submitted a bill to the city assembly to stop people from using their phones while walking.
Reuters
3/11
"The number of people using smartphones has rapidly increased and so have the number of accidents" in the densely populated area, city official Masaaki Yasumi told AFP. | People walk across the Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo.
AFP
4/11
"We want to prevent that," he said, adding if passed it would be the first such ban in Japan. | A passerby wearing a protective face mask walks on the street in Tokyo.
Reuters
5/11
But Yasumi said there will be no punishment for those unable to tear themselves away from their screens in the street.
Reuters
6/11
"We hope the ban will raise more awareness about the dangers," he said. Posters and messages will inform citizens of the rule, expected to take effect from next month.
Reuters
7/11
In 2014, research by Japanese mobile giant NTT Docomo estimated a pedestrian's average field of vision while staring down at a smartphone is five percent of what our eyes take in normally. | People wearing face masks cross a street in Tokyo.
Reuters
8/11
The company ran a computer simulation of what would occur if 1,500 people used the hectic Shibuya pedestrian crossing in Tokyo while all looking at their smartphones.
AFP
9/11
The results showed that two-thirds would not make it to the other side without incident, with 446 collisions, 103 people being knocked down and 21 dropping their phones.
AFP
10/11
The number of accidents between people using phones while riding a bicycle and pedestrians is also increasing in Japan.
AFP
11/11
In some cases, victims' families demand up to 100 million yen ($1 million) in compensation. | A woman using his phone walks across a zebra crossing in Tokyo.
AFP

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