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Police say that the'system failure" is responsible for the outage of Baidu robotaxi in Wuhan.

Local police reported a "system failure" that caused an outage of robotaxis operated by Baidu Apollo Go in the central Chinese city?Wuhan on Wednesday. This re-ignited safety concerns about?the rapidly-growing service.

According to an official announcement, the police received reports late Tuesday night that a number of Apollo Go cars were stuck in the middle and unable to move.

The police reported that passengers were able exit their vehicles safely, and no injuries were reported.

Investigations are still ongoing to determine the cause of this incident.

A traffic police officer told The Paper in a video that at least 100 'Apollo Go' vehicles were affected. Although the doors of the cars could be opened by the officer, he said that some passengers were reluctant to leave their vehicles because of heavy traffic. They called police for help.

Video posted by Douyin's Chinese version of TikTok, which was verified and confirmed, shows vehicles stuck on busy roads, obstructing the flow of traffic.

Local media reported that passengers trapped in vehicles for almost two hours.

Baidu didn't immediately respond to our request for a comment.

On Chinese social media, the accident has prompted a resurgence of discussions about robotaxi safety.

In August, an Apollo Go robotaxi with a passenger in it fell into a construction pit in Chongqing. And in May, one of the?cars operated by Pony.ai caught on fire in Beijing. In either case, no injuries were reported.

Waymo robotaxis stalled and caused traffic jams in San Francisco due to a widespread power outage at the end of last year.

Baidu, along with Pony.ai and WeRide, is China's biggest operator of autonomous driving fleets. These companies have launched commercial robotaxi services in major Chinese cities, and expanded their operations to overseas markets including the Middle East. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger, Kevin Buckland and Qiaoyi Li)

(source: Reuters)