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29-01-2016, 11:40 PM
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:



Hong Kong and Taiwanese don't behave like that.


‘Who got hurt? Go get proof from the hospital’: video of China’s ‘Roaring Queen’ goes viral after she’s asked to keep her voice down on subway train

PUBLISHED : Friday, 29 January, 2016, 12:43pm
UPDATED : Friday, 29 January, 2016, 12:43pm

Sidney Leng
[email protected]

http://cdn4.scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/486x302/public/images/methode/2016/01/29/8ef00044-c63e-11e5-bbaf-0bb83de8b470_1280x720.jpg?itok=F9HFa697

The woman arguing with passengers on the train in Hangzhou. Photo: SCMP Pictures

A video has gone viral on the internet in China of a woman loudly protesting on a subway train after a member of the public asked her to keep her voice down on her mobile phone, a newspaper reported.

The woman from Hangzhou in eastern Zhejiang province has been dubbed by some internet users the “roaring queen” after her outburst.

The video was posted online by a student and it shows the woman dressed in pink talking loudly on her mobile, the Qianjiang Evening News reported.

WATCH: video footage of the outburst (http://view.inews.qq.com/a/NEW2016012900551504)

A member of the public asked her to speak more quietly and she replied, “I have no morals. I’ll be responsible if I do any harm to anyone here.”

A subway security guard later asked her to calm down, but to no avail, the report said.

The woman is shown in the video firing questions at passengers on the train after she hangs up.

“Who got hurt?” she asks.

When confronted by a passengers she says, “Go and get proof from the hospital. I will compensate you. I have the ability to compensate you.”

She then shows her personal ID and cell phone number.

READ MORE: Chinese woman jailed for blocking subway train in row over her crying baby

The woman said she worked in the legal industry and earned a decent monthly salary, according to the report.

The authorities in Hangzhou have banned people from speaking loudly on subway trains.

The media in China regularly reports on disputes on the subway and the authorities in many cities have run campaigns to try to encourage greater courtesy among passengers.





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