Gang-related crimes have been brought under effective control in
Beijing since the city's public security bureau launched a special
crackdown on gang-organized crimes last month.
So far, the police have smashed more than 20 gangs in the city
and arrested about 200 suspects, a bureau report said.
The ongoing crackdown has also solved more than 50 gang-related
criminal cases.
The crackdown began with a raid to the Haiyue Song and Dance
Hall in southwest Beijing's Fengtai District on March 21.
A prior investigation showed that employees at the hall, such as
security guards, had been involved in a number of gang-related
crimes.
Armed policemen captured 19 "gangsters" suspected of various
crimes at the hall and confiscated dozens of hacking knives and
iron sticks.
Another raid in east Beijing's Chaoyang District broke up a gang
of 12 members, police said.
The Ministry of Public Security issued a circular last month to
urge local police bureaux to clean up entertainment venues,
clamping down on gang-related crimes, drugs and prostitution.
"Gang-related crimes are on the rise in China, as society is
going through tremendous economic and social reforms,"
Vice-Minister of Public Security Bai Jingfu said.
He said such crimes often happen at entertainment venues,
restaurants and wholesale markets, and "strict checks at
entertainment venues are crucial to the crackdown."
He warned that leaders of local public security bureaux were
subject to dismissal if criminal gangs in their localities are
crushed through reports to the ministry instead of through their
own efforts.
The circular said venues that violate the regulation and are
warned three times in two years would be shut down, and seedy
venues with poor safety standards would also face being closed.
Names of the entertainment venues that have received official
warnings would be made public.
The order came two weeks after the Regulation on Administration
of Entertainment Venues was enacted on March 1.
It stipulates that all disco halls must conduct security checks,
and that entrances and main passages of all entertainment venues be
monitored using closed-circuit TV.
It also states that all entertainment venues are off-limits to
teenagers and may not operate between 2 and 8 AM.
(China Daily April 12, 2006)