Great informative post HEIC.
I have a question..could you explain this;
Thank you.
Locals and foreigners have to register with the police near their residence.
Great informative post HEIC.
I have a question..could you explain this;
Thank you.
Thank you for the information. I had an inkling that Chinese police were overworked and understaffed, but 20-30 people to oversee tens of thousands is pretty crazy!
They seriously need to move the majority of the paperwork to a different department. There's no reason policemen should be handling registrations when clerks can easily handle it.
n the small town where I live in SW Idaho, we have about 6-7,000 residents and a police force of 12 officers who do all of the patrolling.Well I have two relatives working in China's Police Force, from what I have learned, our police force is dangerously short-staffed.
Can you imagine that a police precinct consists of 20 police officers and handful of auxiliary policemen in the US or UK have to 'protect and serve' literally tens of thousands of people? This is the normal work load for China's police. Also, in China, a typical police station with 50 regular officers are responsible for:
1. Patrolling on foot or in vehicles;
2. Conducting family registration and non-resident registration*;
3. Handling minor offences;
4. Inspect certain business entities as requested by law;
5. Solving 'simple criminal cases';
6. Help solving not-so-simple criminal cases;
7. Community policing;
8. Many other things that come from the strokes of genius of their superiors.
*: According to my relatives this is the largest part of police work, sometimes idle CID officers and SWAT officers are ordered to help them with this matter.
More importantly, if anyone here pay attention to the terrorist attack at the train station in Kunming, there were only a handful of police officers presence when the attack commenced. And in the first SWAT team arrived on scene, only one officer was armed with a cold war-era auto rifle, three other officers were unarmed, which again, is completely unimaginable in the West.
The true reasons behind all these unfortunate domestic violence incidents are insufficient police manpower, and traditional Chinses culture that discourage government meddling with family affairs. The police does not has the resource, nor the will to get involved in domestic violence case, which is a traditionally the purview of Women's League, a QUANGO that can provide nothing more than counseling, sometimes not even counseling.
I can only hope that the situation will be better in the future.
n the small town where I live in SW Idaho, we have about 6-7,000 residents and a police force of 12 officers who do all of the patrolling.
Now, in the wider area, in the government entity/geography we call a "county," there are maybe 25,000 people and a Sheriff's department of 30+ officers handle the issues that are not within the "city" limits. The two Law Enforcement Agencies can also assist one another whenever required.
But all of the patrolling officers are armed...and in the Sheriff's case, they have Rueger min-14s auto-rifles and shotguns available in their trunks if needed. And that is before any SWAT teams are called in.
Thanks for the information...it is interesting to see how these various organizations operate in different countries.
Keep in mind that small towns and counties typically require less police presence than cities. NYPD has 34,500 uniformed officers for a population of 8.4 million. That's a ratio of one police officer per 240 residents.
I am really glad that you like my post, thank you.
About the question on 'family registration' and 'non-resident registration' that take up large part of officers' working time, you can refer to , which I think is fairly accurate. After reading that you may have a better understanding that why is it so important for the police.
About Chinese police officers' weapon, one should know that firearms are not obtainable by general public, unlike many countries in the West. Therefore Chinese police force is very cautious about the use of lethal force, because the cost of an officer shooting someone he should not shoot could be very large. There will be public outcry, condemnation from the press, official press and private free market press alike, investigation and inquiry from superiors, and eventually heads will roll, the responsible officer are sacked, his superiors, all the way from inspector up to superintendent-rank, get a dot in their annual assessments.
As a matter of fact, the threat to a police officer's life mostly comes from knives, sometimes DUI drivers, rarely firearms. Until the recent Kunming incident, most Chinese police officers go on patrol unarmed, and excercise great restrain when using force. Therefore China could be the only country that people dare to insult or attack police officers not because they can win, but because they know the officers won't fight back.
I have seen with my own eyes that a drunken driver tried to grab a SWAT officer's SMG, the officer just push him back and did nothing else, his colleagues were trying hard to calm the DUI driver. In the end that driver successfully grabbed the magazine of SMG and smashed it to the ground, after which he was cuffed and sent to the station. He was released when he get sober. All punishment handed down is credit deduction from his licence.
I can't say I like this, but it is happening in China. Fortunately our police force are not as afraid to use force as before, for the lessons taught in Kunming and other incidents.
I am really glad that you like my post, thank you.
About the question on 'family registration' and 'non-resident registration' that take up large part of officers' working time, you can refer to , which I think is fairly accurate. After reading that you may have a better understanding that why is it so important for the police.
About Chinese police officers' weapon, one should know that firearms are not obtainable by general public, unlike many countries in the West. Therefore Chinese police force is very cautious about the use of lethal force, because the cost of an officer shooting someone he should not shoot could be very large. There will be public outcry, condemnation from the press, official press and private free market press alike, investigation and inquiry from superiors, and eventually heads will roll, the responsible officer are sacked, his superiors, all the way from inspector up to superintendent-rank, get a dot in their annual assessments.
As a matter of fact, the threat to a police officer's life mostly comes from knives, sometimes DUI drivers, rarely firearms. Until the recent Kunming incident, most Chinese police officers go on patrol unarmed, and excercise great restrain when using force. Therefore China could be the only country that people dare to insult or attack police officers not because they can win, but because they know the officers won't fight back.
I have seen with my own eyes that a drunken driver tried to grab a SWAT officer's SMG, the officer just push him back and did nothing else, his colleagues were trying hard to calm the DUI driver. In the end that driver successfully grabbed the magazine of SMG and smashed it to the ground, after which he was cuffed and sent to the station. He was released when he get sober. All punishment handed down is credit deduction from his licence.
I can't say I like this, but it is happening in China. Fortunately our police force are not as afraid to use force as before, for the lessons taught in Kunming and other incidents.
I would like to add to that an article I read once. In addition to what HEIC said, many Chinese cops prefer not to carry firearms even though they have one. Because of the strict gun control laws in China, guns are extremely valuable in the black market. A cop patrolling with a firearm becomes a target. If the cop misplaces his firearm, or it gets stolen, the officer could face huge penalties. Thus, most cops prefer not to bring a gun on routine patrols.
However, I have to wonder why those cops don't have non-lethal weapons like police batons and mace cans.