--FILE--Vue de d'interdiction de fumer à l'hotel dans la ville de Qingdao, province de Shandong en Chine orientale, le 29 septembre 2016. Les voyageurs qui s
--FILE--View of a No Smoking sign at the Qingdao railway station in Qingdao city, east China's Shandong province, 29 September 2016. Travelers who smoke on bullet trains or the no-smoking areas on ordinary trains could be banned from train travel for 180 days, according to new guidelines issued by China's government. Under the plans jointly issued by the National Development and Reform Commission, Supreme People's Court, and other government departments, people who endanger railway safety, evade train fares, produce or sell fake train tickets, will also be banned from purchasing train tickets for up to 180 days starting May 1. New rules will also apply to credit defaulters, people found to have engaged in embezzlement or taxation illegal practices, and people who have defaulted on loans to international financial institutions, will be also placed on a travel blacklist for one year. People on the blacklist will be unable to buy plane tickets, or upper class train tickets.