BEIJING, Feb 7. (Xinhua) -- With a few months to go
until the Olympics, Beijing residents are making progress with their etiquette,
as indicated by a "city index".
A survey released by Renmin University found that in
2007, 2.54percent of people still spat in public, down by 2.36 percentage points
from 2006.
Over the past three years, the poll surveyed more
than 10,000 local residents and 1,000 foreigners who had lived in Beijing for
more than two years. It also gathered 3,000-hour observations from300,000 people
at 320 public venues and 200,000 automobiles.
The survey found that the occurrence of littering in
public had dropped from 5.3 percent in 2006 to 2.86 percent in 2007 and
queue-jumping dropped from 6 percent to 1.5 percent.
The "civic index" of Beijingers, calculated using
several parameters, was 73.38 in 2007, up from 65.21 and 69.06 in 2005 and2006,
respectively. The index reflects compliance with rules involving public health
and public order, attitudes towards strangers, etiquette at sports events and a
willingness to contribute to the Olympic Games.
However, the "civic index" still fell short of the
standard required for the 2008 Olympics, according to Sha Lianxiang, a sociology
professor at Renmin University. The standard is said to be 80 points.
Beijing expects to receive 550,000 foreign tourists
during the Olympics and an estimated 2 million domestic tourists will also
visit.
The city has also issued 2.8 million pamphlets about
daily etiquette to local households and offered courses to all civil servants
and 870,000 people working in the service sector, such as cab drivers, waiters
and waitresses, and bus conductors.
"Sentences like 'No means no, it doesn't need an
explanation' and 'We can't help you. Go ask someone else' are strictly
prohibited," said a cab driver.
The 11th of each month is officially considered as
"Queuing Day" as passengers are told to stand in line while waiting for buses.
Meanwhile, people caught spitting in public face
fines up to 50yuan (6.85 U.S. dollars). Rude manners when watching sports
competitions may incur a detention.