This is the moment a woman in China was surprised to find locked padlocks on the buttons of an elevator and decided to film it to share online:
The strange incident was reported in the city of Yancheng, in the eastern-central coastal province of Jiangsu.
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The camerawoman, who has been identified only as Ms Wu, explained how she found the whole scene almost surreal when she entered a rarely-used freight elevator and found the numbers had rusty locks on them.
Despite the other numbers being open, the number five button was totally covered and locked up so that it could not be pressed.
She also noticed that the number two and number three had flaps that could be locked although at the time the woman was in the elevator, they were left open and accessible.
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Only the number four and the first floor appear to be available at all times.
She said: “As for the specific situation, I don’t know what it is. It’s the first time I have seen a 'locked elevator' despite taking elevators for so many years."
She also did not expect such a reaction from people online who began to share the story and make assumptions on the reason for the locks.
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One person wrote: “Could it be that there are some unknown secrets about this fifth floor? Every night, will this lock open silently by itself?"
While another said: “There is no money being paid by people on the fifth floor, so this elevator will not be used on the fifth floor. This is all normal, and we need to get used to a society that operates like this."
Who else reckons it's the floor Joe Goldberg keeps his glass enclosure? Or it could even be to stop kids peeing on the numbers. You might think it doesn't happen but it does.
It happened back in 2018 when CCTV caught the boy, from Chongqing in south-west China, having a wee on the controls and then accidentally getting himself stuck inside.
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The little escapade ended up completely busting the door of the lift, trapping him inside, leaving him reaching panic buttons as well as the other pee-drenched buttons.
Featured Image Credit: wdxj0823/AsiaWire