Vietnam wears a helmet!
09
July
Vietnam is a motorcycle country. Two wheels (about 90%) greatly outnumber the cars on the road. But hardly anyone there wore a helmet on the road. Thankfully, that’s a thing of the past.
So how did the country get it’s more than 12 million riders to wear one? Well, it all started with ad campaigns such as this:

On December 15, 2007, wearing a helmet became mandatory (Government Decree Number 32 - Mandatory Helmet Law) to all motorbike riders in Vietnam. My recent visit there is proof that indeed, everyone now wears a helmet there and not just in Ho Chi Minh but in the rural areas as well. Our tour guide said not everyone is happy with the new law but all are forced to comply than pay the fine of 200,000 dong or roughly about U$D12.
And since the “coolness” factor ranks high for most Vietnamese riders, some of their helmets (they used to jokingly refer to these protective headgears as “rice cooker”) don’t look like helmets at all! For a rider like me, Vietnam roads was practically an endless showroom of fancy helmets money could buy. There are ones that are shaped like baseball caps, cowboy hats, bowler, sola topee, and knitted beanies. There are colorful visors made of cloth attachable to a plain-looking helmets. At one time, I think I even saw a helmet that looks like the familiar Vietnamese straw hat. You name it, they have it!








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