Guangdong police have pledged to make more use
of helicopters in the future to tackle crime.
Zhu Suisheng, deputy director of Guangdong Provincial Department
of Public Security, said his department would try to introduce a
more efficient system to authorize the use of helicopters this
year.
Public security departments in cities across the province can
apply to use police helicopters from the provincial department when
they are needed, Zhu told a police aviation work conference in
Guangdong's city of Foshan recently.
But the departments currently have to go through complicated and
time-consuming procedures before they are given the green-light to
use them.
Zhu also urged relevant police departments to fully understand
the importance police helicopters can play in fighting crime.
"Police helicopter teams should also expand their co-operation
with ground and marine police forces to further improve their
effectiveness," he said.
Zhu refused to reveal how many helicopters Guangdong police
owned at present.
But the province would purchase more helicopters from both home
and abroad if they were needed, he said.
Residents in the province have welcomed the developments.
Lu Changjun, a private business owner, said the wider use of
police helicopters would help bring down Guangdong's crime rate,
which is believed to be one of the highest on the Chinese
mainland.
He said he believed helicopters can be used to pursue runaway
suspects and monitor their escape routes.
The provincial Department of Public Security established its
first police flying fleet in 2002, when it acquired two European
made helicopters.
Shenzhen police bought an Italian made helicopter in July
2004.
Huizhou Municipal Bureau of Public Security in the Pearl River
Delta is currently preparing to establish its own fleet.
Helicopters are playing an increasingly important role in
fighting crime in Guangdong Province, which borders Hong Kong and
Macao special administrative regions.
The province has many forest areas, and the country's longest
coastline and river network.
Two police helicopters from the provincial Department of Public
Security successfully co-operated with ground and marine police
forces to bust a major counterfeit cigarette production base on a
boat off Guangzhou's Panyu District in December 2004.
Twenty-two suspects were detained, and production equipment and
fake cigarettes were seized.
Guangzhou police also used a helicopter to successfully capture
two robbery suspects who escaped to a forest area in the previous
year.
The Ministry of Public Security has previously highly praised
the role of Guangdong's police helicopters in fighting crime.
(China Daily May 15, 2006)