Home>News Center>Life
         
 

'110'set to be a unified emergency number
By Zhu Zhe (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-01-10 06:07

In emergencies that leave your head spinning, can you remember that 110 is for police, 119 for fire and 122 for road accidents?

If your answer is not a confident "yes," there's good news you have to dial only 110 for any emergency in Beijing from the second half of the year, the city's public security bureau announced yesterday.

Police officers, firefighters or traffic police will be despatched once the headquarters receives a 110 call. But 119 and 122 will remain in use and residents are encouraged to continue using the numbers to ease the pressure on 110 operators, said Ji Kaixuan, director of Beijing's 110 Emergency Centre.

He said the move is for public convenience and for better co-operation among different departments so that "we can respond faster and more effectively to emergency calls."

Meanwhile, addressing public complaints that it is sometimes difficult to get through to 110, the centre is planning to expand the existing 16 lines to 30 by July. In 2008, it will be able to handle 60 calls simultaneously to ensure a safe Beijing Olympic Games.

"Direct access to 110 with no delay is our aim and responsibility," Ji said.

Bureau officers told China Daily that an English service for emergency calls will be provided by 2008.

The centre is also working with telecommunications departments to enable residents to report emergencies through mobile phone text messages when they cannot get through on the telephone, but the system will not be up and running till the second half of the year.

Last year, Beijing handled 3.67 million 110 calls, up 9.4 per cent from the previous year; and more than 11,000 suspects were caught on the spot.

It also helped handle civic problems such as noise, leaking pipes and even conflicts resulting from love affairs. Since it was set up a decade ago, Beijing 110 has helped more than 5.45 million people out of such troubles.

(China Daily 01/10/2006 page2)



Oscars forecast
Critics' Choice Awards
Gigi Leung, Ekin Cheng confirmed split up
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Catholicism flourishes in Yunnan's Tibetan village

 

   
 

Researcher: China unlikely to sell dollars

 

   
 

8th human case of bird flu reported

 

   
 

Scientists faked two papers but cloned dog

 

   
 

China, Japan to discuss oil dispute

 

   
 

Soros sees chance of recession in 2007

 

   
  Korean University says cloning claim faked
   
  Name list of bosses and officials in brisk sales
   
  Japan prince fights against female succesion
   
  '110'set to be a unified emergency number
   
  'Hero' sues girl he saved for compensation
   
  One-way trip into black hole takes 200,000 years
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Could China's richest be the tax cheaters?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement