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						Didi passenger killed amid China ride-hailing safety 
						concerns
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		 [August 25, 2018] 
		 By Lusha Zhang and Tony Munroe 
 BEIJING (Reuters) - A ride-sharing 
		passenger in the eastern Chinese city of Wenzhou was raped and killed, 
		allegedly by a driver for the country's largest ride-hailing firm, local 
		police said on Saturday, the latest violent crime to fuel safety 
		concerns about the service.
 
 Didi Chuxing, the biggest ride-sharing firm globally by number of trips, 
		was "immensely saddened by the tragedy," it said in a statement.
 
 "We are deeply sorry. We fell short of your expectations. We can't and 
		we won't shirk from our responsibilities," it said.
 
 The incident took place as Didi has been stepping up safety measures 
		including for its carpooling service, Didi Hitch, after the murder of a 
		flight attendant in May sparked wider community outrage.
 
		 
		The steps include limiting Didi Hitch drivers to picking up passengers 
		of the same sex during early morning and late evening hours.
 Police in Wenzhou's Yueqing city said on their official microblog that 
		the 20-year-old woman, surnamed Zhao, got into a Didi carpool vehicle at 
		1 p.m. on Friday, and sent a message to a friend at around 2 p.m. 
		seeking help before losing contact.
 
 Police said they found the suspect, a 27-year-old driver from Sichuan 
		province surnamed Zhong, at about 4 a.m. on Saturday. They said Zhong 
		confessed, and that the victim's body had been recovered and an 
		investigation was continuing.
 
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			A man is seen in front of a Didi sign before a promotional event of 
			its Hitch service for the Spring festival travel rush, in Beijing, 
			China January 24, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo 
            
			 
Didi said the driver had passed background checks and had logged in with his 
authentic ID and had been confirmed by facial recognition on the day. However, 
the driver had altered the car's license plate before the trip, the company 
said.
 A day earlier, a passenger had complained to Didi that the same driver had 
repeatedly requested that she sit in the front seat, drove to a remote area, and 
followed her "for a distance" after she got out of the car, Didi said. It said 
the customer service representative who took the complaint had not followed up 
with an investigation within two hours, as the firm promises.
 
 Didi Chuxing - which has been valued at $50 billion and counts SoftBank Group 
Corp as a major investor - is aggressively expanding overseas, targeting new 
markets in Mexico, Brazil and Australia, going head-to-head with Uber. In 2016, 
Didi acquired Uber's China business.
 
 The latest case was also trending on the Twitter-like Weibo platform, with seven 
related topics in the top 50 on Saturday afternoon.
 
 (Reporting by Lusha Zhang and Tony Munroe; Additional reporting by Pei Li; 
Editing by Sam Holmes)
 
				 
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