Beijing to boost civil patrol force for 2008 Games   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-05-12 22:00  Beijing will build a 50,000-strong civil patrol 
force by 2008 to bolster security ahead of the Olympic Games, a Chinese 
newspaper said on Friday. 
The force would comprise 70 percent permanent residents, 20 percent retired 
soldiers and 10 percent from Beijing's non-permanent resident population, the 
Beijing News reported. 
 Already 21,000-strong, the force would grow to 30,000 by the end of the year, 
the newspaper quoted police official Miao Lin as saying. 
 The government had already spent 200 million yuan building the force, the 
official added. 
 Patrol members were responsible for checking criminal activity, accident 
damage control, venue security, assisting in emergency situations and managing 
dangers within their jurisdiction, said Liu Yucheng, a Beijing Public Security 
Bureau official. 
 In addition to a fixed monthly salary of up to 700 yuan ($87), members would 
receive accident and injury insurance, and bonuses for assisting in emergency 
situations and making arrests that led to criminal charges, Liu added. 
 Recruits would be drawn from Beijing's existing "community security guards," 
retired soldiers and sacked workers, the newspaper said. 
 Beijing local councils employ thousands of community guards, largely made up 
of the retired and elderly. 
 However, that force did not meet the necessary security requirements for 2008 
and would be relegated to watching housing estates while the new professional 
force took over their duties, Miao Lin said.    
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