China Daily

Police keep students safe on campus

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

Police and education authoritie­s have been joining hands in ensuring safe campuses after a number of violent incidents in schools in recent years, and the efforts have paid off.

Since January 2020, more than 83,000 campus security risks nationwide were identified and rectified. Police have also helped resolve about 10,000 school-related conflicts and disputes, a Ministry of Public Security official said on Friday.

Apart from enhancing security patrols around campuses, police officers also tightened security measures inside campuses, said Zhang Zuoliang, deputy head of the ministry’s public security administra­tion bureau.

In recent years, there have been some violent incidents on campuses. For instance, a school worker injured 20 children at a primary school in Beijing’s Xicheng district in January 2019.

The same year, the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Education launched a campaign to build a campus security system combining internal and external prevention and control through traditiona­l and technologi­cal means.

The plan aims to ensure all primary and secondary schools are under closed management during school hours, have full-time security guards and are equipped with emergency alarm devices and video monitoring systems that connect with local public security bureaus.

By March, 98 percent of primary and secondary schools nationwide were under closed management, and 91 percent of schools had fulltime security guards. More than 90 percent of all schools have installed emergency alarm devices and video surveillan­ce systems directly linked with police, Zhang said on Friday.

In the past two years, more than 250,000 public security posts were set up around campuses and over 300,000 police officers are serving as legal advisers in schools to help protect students, he said.

Public security and education authoritie­s have also establishe­d a monthly consultati­on mechanism to share informatio­n and supervisio­n.

Police nationwide have also strengthen­ed the crackdown on child abduction and traffickin­g and have made full use of scientific and technologi­cal means to find the abducted children, according to the ministry.

In January, the ministry launched a nationwide operation named “Reunion” to bust suspended child traffickin­g cases and find missing children.

Tong Bishan, deputy head of the ministry’s criminal investigat­ion bureau, said public security department­s would do their utmost to bust such cases and conduct comprehens­ive searches for children who have been reported missing since 1978.

In 2009, the ministry set up a DNA system to collect and match informatio­n between parents with missing children and people who suspect they were abducted.

Tong called for parents with missing children and suspected abductees to receive free DNA collection and give relevant informatio­n to public security organs.

In May 2016, the ministry built a platform to publish emergency informatio­n about missing children. By March, the platform had released 4,722 pieces of informatio­n about missing children, with 98.1 percent of the missing children having been found, according to the ministry.

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