Indian origin taxi drivers in New Zealand say cameras won’t stop all violence
April 1st, 2010 - 1:43 pm ICT by ANIWellington, Apr 1 (ANI): Auckland taxi drivers have mixed feelings about the New Zealand Government’s moves to make surveillance cameras mandatory in their cabs, following a safety review prompted by the murder of Indian-origin taxi driver Hiren Mohini here.
Some taxi drivers said nothing will make them feel safe enough at night.
Transport Minister Steven Joyce said on Wednesday that he would recommend to the Cabinet that taxi companies be required to install cameras in cabs in cities and large towns throughout New Zealand.
That follows advice from officials that attack on taxi drivers in Australia dropped by at least 70 per cent after cab cameras became compulsory.
The Taxi Federation welcomed the minister’s decision, following murders of two cabbies in little more than a year, NZ Herald reports.
Several recent assaults have been reported in Tauranga, including the bashing a week ago of a 55-year-old cabbie left with serious facial and head injuries.
Vivek Rao, of Reliable Cabs, used to drive at night but Mohini’s murder drew a demand from his family that he must operate only in daylight hours.
He did not believe cameras would be an effective enough deterrence for passengers bent on violence, some of whom would be too drunk to notice them, and believed the Government should at least offer loans to drivers hard-pressed to afford the extra cost, NZ Herald reports.
“It is hard to deal with those people who get drunk and threaten you, or fall asleep in the car,” he said.
Fellow driver Major Aujla said that if the cabbies were required to pay for mandatory security measures, they should be entitled to choose between cameras and protective screens, which he believed would be more effective. (ANI)
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- Mohini's murder prompts Wednesday safety review of Kiwi taxi industry - Mar 28, 2010
- Another cabbie robbed at knifepoint in New Zealand - Apr 02, 2010
- Despite Hiren Mohini's killing, Auckland taxi sector "too slow" to act - Apr 03, 2010
- Now, security cameras for Kiwi cabs after fatal attack on Indian origin driver - Aug 10, 2010
- Auckland cabbie Hiren Mohini's wife wants to confront murder suspect - Dec 26, 2010
- Cameras likely for New Zealand cabs after Hiren Mohini's killing - Feb 11, 2010
- New Zealand Taxi Federation calls for cameras after another attack on cabbie - Oct 24, 2010
- Auckland cabbie Hiren Mohini's murder suspect likely to be tried in China - Jun 19, 2010
- Police seek identification of Indian taxi driver's killer - Feb 09, 2010
- Taxis to have shield after Indian origin driver's killing - May 22, 2010
- New Zealand raise 100,000 dollars for slain Indian-origin cabbie Mohini's family - Apr 14, 2010
- Bashing up of Dunedin cabbie sparks off fears of more attacks on drivers - Jul 26, 2010
- New Zealand taxi-drivers "arming themselves" after Hiren Mohini's killing - Feb 02, 2010
- 'Petrified' Indian cabbie drivers want cameras, perspex screens following Mohini murder - Feb 05, 2010
Tags: aujla, cabbie, cabbies, cabs, daylight hours, deterrence, fellow driver, head injuries, hiren, indian origin, new zealand government, protective screens, security measures, surveillance cameras, tauranga, taxi companies, taxi driver, taxi drivers, transport minister, vivek rao