47 cases of Nghe An Traffic Police revoking driving licenses on VNeID
After more than 10 days of implementing the regulation that traffic participants can present documents on VNeID when the traffic police check, Nghe An has 47 cases of traffic violations whose driving licenses on VNeID were revoked.
According to the Provincial Traffic Police Department, from July 1 to 12, the traffic police force in the province inspected and controlled vehicles using paper information on VNeID, compared with the administrative violation handling database system in 2,063 cases (711 cars, 1,352 motorbikes); recorded 871 cases (394 cars, 477 motorbikes); of which the driving licenses in the electronic environment were temporarily seized in 146 cases (91 cars, 55 motorbikes). Notably, the authorities revoked the driving licenses in the electronic environment in 47 cases (27 cars, 20 motorbikes).

This is the new content stipulated in Circular 28/2024/TT-BCA dated June 29, 2024 amending and supplementing a number of articles of Circular No. 32 regulating the tasks, powers, forms, contents and procedures for patrolling, controlling and handling administrative violations of road traffic by traffic police and Circular No. 24 regulating the issuance and revocation of registration and license plates of motor vehicles, effective from July 1, 2024.
According to the new circular, during the handling process, if the violator presents documents via VNeID, the authorities will temporarily detain the documents in the electronic environment.
According to Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Nam Hong - Deputy Head of the Traffic Police Department of the Provincial Police, the fact that traffic participants can present information via the VNeID application without having to carry original documents helps minimize the risk of loss or damage of documents and increases convenience during the inspection process. Using integrated information on VNeID not only brings convenience to people but also helps the Traffic Police increase work efficiency.
With the electronic database managed by the Ministry of Public Security, checking and verifying information becomes faster and more accurate. This helps reduce fraud and the use of fake documents in traffic.
At the same time, through continuous updating and integration of information, traffic police can easily retrieve violation history and vehicle registration status, thereby improving the ability to monitor and handle violations.
When a driver's license is revoked electronically, the traffic police officer will enter data into the system to display the information on how long the document will be revoked. Thus, using hard copies of documents is useless because when checking, the traffic police will look it up on the system.
Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Nam Hong - Deputy Head of Traffic Police Department, Provincial Police