Home>News Center>China
       
 

Personnel reform to increase frontline policemen
By Wang Zhuoqiong (China Daily)
Updated: 2004-09-20 08:51

SHENZHEN: Policemen shuffling paper in offices may no longer be treated as policemen if a proposal to reform the personnel system is adopted by Shenzhen.

According to the suggestions made by the Shenzhen People's Political Consultative Conference, office workers in the Shenzhen Public Security Bureau will be remunerated and promoted the same way as civil servants or government contract workers.

The reform aims to encourage more policemen to join frontline work, amid complaints that street patrolling officers face greater danger but receive the same pay as those working in offices.

"The proposal is definitely good news for the city," said Wang Yongli, a senior official with the Shenzhen Public Security Bureau.

While the increase in the number of frontline officers will make the city safer, the reform will also help trim redundant personnel, reduce expenditure and improve efficiency, he said.

Taxpayers' money is better used because frontline police officers are compensated for the dangerous work they do, he added.

The reform is also expected to increase promotion opportunities for frontline officers.

"It seemed to me that policemen in offices had more chances of promotion than us," said Ke, a patrol policeman.

He believes that the police are not short-handed but that human resources are inefficiently distributed.

"To protect the public, we need more policemen to get out of office, go to the community and patrol the streets," said Ke.

According to the personnel department of the municipal government, the reform will increase the number of frontline policeman by 20 per cent.

Shenzhen has a serious social security problem due to the large transient population - almost half the people living in the city are not long-term residents. In July, a total of 8,747 crimes were reported, including 3,022 robberies.

Nearly 400 million yuan (US$48.37 million) has been injected and 3,000 police officers deployed to the frontline to curb street crimes this year.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Hu takes over as CPC military commission chief

 

   
 

Corrupt land minister expelled from CPC

 

   
 

Jiang retires, proposes Hu to succeed

 

   
 

Vice premier: Economic curbs are working

 

   
 

Potala Palace repairs done in Tibetan style

 

   
 

Bomb threat postpones Beijing trade fair

 

   
  Potala Palace repairs done in Tibetan style
   
  Vice premier: Economic curbs are working
   
  More young S. Koreans opt to learn Chinese
   
  China prepares for holiday passenger peak
   
  Negative interest a headache for bankers
   
  Sirens wail across China to mark 1931 attack
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement