From next month, personal information of hotel guests in Guangdong Province will appear on police
computers within three hours after they check in.
All hotels and inns in the province have been ordered to install
a new security management system the first of its kind in the
country given free by the police, according to a provincial
regulation on management of hotels and security.
The system, which is linked to public security departments'
computer network, will enable police to have easier access to hotel
guests' information.
Hotels that fail to install the system before the end of August
will be fined between 5,000 yuan (US$625) and 10,000 yuan
(US$12,500), with heavier penalties including withdrawal of
business licences prescribed after September.
Currently, guests at hotels nationwide have to use only their
identity card to register but some criminals have used forged ID
cards to check in, and some hotels do not even require proof of
identity.
The latest move is to "standardize the operation of hotels and
maintain social order," according to a police officer in the
Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Public Security yesterday.
"Police should have the right to check hotel guests' identity
and personal data while investigating criminal cases," said the
officer, who did not want to be named.
He said he believed the new practice would help in the capture
of criminals and bring down the crime rate in the province among
the highest in the country.
He promised that the police would follow a code of conduct while
handling guests' personal data.
Wu Yida, a local lawyer, said it is not a violation of law for
police to check hotel guests' information while handling criminal
cases.
But he hoped detailed guidelines on the use of such personal
data are released.
Many hotels in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, seemed
unfazed by the new regulation.
A hotel manager in Tianhe District said the new rules would not
affect occupancy rates.
"Hotels already require guests to show their ID cards while
checking in, and most guests believe hotels would not leak their
personal information randomly," said the manager, who requested
anonymity.
Chen Xiaofan, a tourist from Beijing, said hotel guests "would
feel safer" with the new regulation but others disagreed.
Bill Cheung, a Hong Kong businessman, is worried about
intrusions on his privacy.
"In Hong Kong, people do not even have to use their real names
to register in hotels," Cheung said.
Cheung travels to Guangdong on business many times a year and
stays in hotels.
(China Daily August 18, 2006)