Only the UK and Japan know about the countries where vehicles pass on the left.
What other countries are there?
And is there a reason why you went to the left?
Is there a case where you change from left to right or vice versa?
1377 2016-04-20 Gentleman
The origin of the left-hand traffic country, the United Kingdom, was the beginning of wagons passing on the left.
This is because if the wagon passes on the right, the whip of the right hand faces the sidewalk, which can hurt pedestrians.
If the wagon passes on the left, the whip will face the centerline, so pedestrians will not be injured, so the British wagon will pass on the left, and now the vehicle will pass on the left.
The left-hand traffic is East Timor, Bangladesh, Botswana, Brunei, Hong Kong, Macau, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan, Samoa, Swaziland, Thailand, Bhutan, Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Fiji, Cyprus, England, Ireland, Barbuda, Ghana, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Kenya, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Swaziland, Malaysia, Malaysia.
Other than that, the rest of the country goes to the right.
In Japan, it was originally a rule to go to the left.
But Okinawa was briefly on the right side during the American colonial period.
After Okinawa returned it from the United States in 1972, after a six-year grace period, it switched to left-hand traffic as of July 30, 1978.
Sweden is a country that used to pass on the left and switched to the right.
Sweden originally had left-hand traffic, but left-hand traffic, which had been consistently observed for 300 years, was converted to right-hand traffic as of September 3, 1967, due to the side effects of collisions at the borders of neighboring Finland and Norway.
© 2013-2025 LifeQnA. All rights reserved.