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After the Toll in Japan was disrupted in April, 24,000 online drivers were pushed despite the free traffic. The defect of 106 gates was affected. Nexco Central later gave up the fees.
Representative image. (Pexels)
About 24,000 people voluntarily pushed in Gates Toll after the Toll in Japan was broken in April, and vehicles were allowed to pass through the Gates Toll for free, with a request for payment later online. The Japanese people are known to follow the rules hard and obey social and legal standards.
Despite the opportunity to benefit from the failure of the regime, most drivers chose to do the right thing, with a highlight of the country’s reputation in discipline and commitment to social standards.
NDTV quoted a report on Japan today, according to which the accident occurred on April 8 and most April, when the e -losses group (ETC) failed for about 38 hours. In Japan, cars should be slowly slowed at the fee gate, and once you read the card signal, the gates rise automatically and allow the car to pass.
A technical defect impact on 106 gates on the Tomei and Chuo Expression, which extends to Tokyo and many provinces, including Kanagawa, Yamanashi, Nagano, Shizuoka, Aichi, GIFU and MIE, making them unable to read drivers cards.
Next, Expressway Center Nippon Expressway Co, also known as Nexco Central, decided to open all the outcome gates to allow cars to pass, “keeping traffic flows on some highways in Japan,” said NDTV.
By 10 pm on April 8, Nexco Central has received payment offers from about 24,000 drivers who have not been read online collection cards (etc.) due to system failure. During power outages, I used an estimated 920,000 vehicles equipped with highways; However, it is still unclear whether all of these cars are traveling inside the affected areas.
In May, the company announced that it was giving up fees for vehicles that passed through the affected areas during the failure of the outcome system. Drivers who have already paid full payment through ETC Miles or any other means will get.
In response to the news, social media users praised the high Japan community and the population to maintain the system of order.
One user said: “Japan is a high confidence community
A third commented: “I traveled in Japan last year. The system is very good. You didn’t even stop at the outcome gates.”
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