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Nearly 10 red-light runners nabbed daily on average, or about 290 a month.

And forget London’s busiest intersections, because the place where the most red-light bandits get caught red-handed is Adelaide Street and Queens Avenue, a relatively low-traffic crossing.

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As the first anniversary of London’s program to catch red-light runners nears, the early numbers are in from the cameras that photograph vehicles driven by intersection scofflaws.

Because the program’s rollout has been gradual and slower than expected – the first machine was not activated until last June – there are no full-year figures yet on how many tickets they’ve fired out.

There are only statistics to the end of February, covering the first nine months of the initiative.

And while city hall’s point person on the cameras says he’s not too surprised at the intersection that stands out as the worst place for red-light running, the uneven distribution of the tickets might be an eye-opener for some London drivers.