Ch. 1 · Common Conduct
If a traffic-directing police officer is signalling with both arms held straight up overhead, this carries the same meaning as a red light for vehicles approaching from the direction the arms point toward.
[True / False · Hard]
Answer: ✕ False
Explanation
With a uniformed officer's arms raised straight up, traffic that faces the officer's front or back is treated as if a red signal were displayed, while traffic moving parallel to the outstretched arms (i.e. coming from the officer's sides) is treated as if a yellow signal were displayed. The question's claim about "vehicles approaching from the direction the arms point toward" describes the sides — that traffic gets a yellow, not a red. Reference: Road Traffic Act Enforcement Order Article 2 (1); Rules of the Road Chapter 1, Section 3, Appendix Table 1 (3).
Driving school curriculumStage 1 – Topic 2: Following traffic signals
Source: Ch. 1 Common Conduct · Section (第3節 警察官などの指示に従うこと) · 第3節 警察官などの指示に従うこと
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Source content excerpted from the NPA “Rules of the Road” instructional manual, in the public domain under Japanese Copyright Act Article 13(2). Explanations are AI-assisted and copyrighted by the MenkyoQuest editorial team.