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BEIJING, June 6 (Xinhuanet) -- On May 26 two pickpockets were caught
red-handed in Xi'an, capital city of Northwest China's Shaanxi Province. They
were stealing a cellphone.
 Two pickpockets are caught
red-handed in Xi’an, capital city of Northwest China's Shaanxi Province on
May 26. One of them claimed he had AIDS. The claim left police in an
awkward position. They first asked the victim surnamed Yan together with
the suspect to go to a local police station in a taxi but Yan refused.
[newsphoto] |
A few minutes later two police cars arrived on the scene. The cops
questioned the suspects, the taller of whom claimed he had AIDS. A piece of
paper in his pocket mentioned the disease.
The cops decided to first send the short suspect back to the station and
leave the other to the local emergency centre.
An ambulance pulled up. The medical people, after learning the nature of
the emergency, would not even get out. They said only the provincial disease
control centre could handle such a situation, and they had no protective gear.
For a full hour there was an impasse. Finally instructions were relayed.
The ambulance was ordered to transport the suspect to the police station. Before
it pulled away, the medical people insisted one of the cops sit with them. After
some hesitation, the police obliged.
As a crime-fighting melodrama, this was far from a heart-pounding,
tire-screeching episode. Yet it vividly illustrates the predicament of law
enforcement agents who in the line of duty face a deadly disease that is quietly
wriggling its way through the fabric of Chinese society.
Lethal weapon
In recent years special clusters of petty crooks have emerged in urban
China, reported Sunday's China Daily. When they are caught, they do not hesitate
to announce they are carriers of the HIV virus. As a result, they rarely face
detention.
Word seems to spread quickly among these groups. They soon find out which
city has the most "lenient" police. For quite some time, Hangzhou of Zhejiang
Province, known for its beautiful West Lake, was also a paradise for so-called
"AIDS pickpockets." Cops would rarely lay a hand on them, let alone abuse them.
 Police called a local emergency centre for an ambulance. The
medical workers, however, would not assist on the grounds that they had no
protective gear. [newsphoto] |
The social stigma surrounding the country's AIDS patients is such that a
few carriers of the virus, real or pretend, have transformed it into a
protective shield while engaging in illegal activities. For a while there was
even rumours that gullible youngsters in backward regions were injecting the
virus into their bodies so that they could roam free in the urban underground
and pick pockets with impunity.
"Who would be so stupid to do that?" retorts Lao Shu, a thief convicted in
Hangzhou but originally from Luzhai County in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region.
Many of the "AIDS pickpockets" in this picturesque tourist town are Luzhai
natives. Yet Lao does not know a single one who would want a grand career of
thievery by subjecting himself to a lethal injection.
Like 61.6 per cent of the country's HIV carriers, Lao got the virus by
taking drugs, "probably when sharing needles with others."
He got hooked at the tender age of 13, moved to Hangzhou at 15, and was
infected with HIV the next year, 2000. He cannot even remember how many times he
has been arrested or sent to mandatory drug rehabilitation. Every time he comes
out, he reverts to stealing "because that's the only way to support my drug
habit."
Lao reveals it takes him about 10 seconds to steal a wallet, usually by
using a small clamp. His average daily take is 600 yuan (US$73), roughly what a
migrant worker in China would make in a month. But it can support only two days
of his drug consumption. He says he never resists police arrest. "I just follow
them. They usually set me free in a few days and everything is back to normal."
By "normal" he means living off other's property surreptitiously and in the
shadow of death. "We never bring up the topic of AIDS among ourselves," he says.
Police dilemma
Late last year, Hangzhou police rounded up members of this group. Of the 26
people arrested during the initial campaign, 13 tested positive to the AIDS
virus.
 After some apparent hesitation, a policeman sits away from
the suspect who claims to be an AIDS patient.
[newsphoto] |
To stem the tide of worsening social order and deal with mounting public
complaints, police had to take action. But the cost is steep.
Wang Qingkun, a local officer, disclosed that they have a pilot programme
in place for "putting AIDS pickpockets in one facility." To insure security, at
least one policeman is assigned for each offender/patient. Everyone must wear
two layers of gloves, a special mask and helmet. No sharp objects are allowed on
the premises. Special sanitation policies are also adopted.
On top of that, there is the health-care cost. "Who will foot the bill? The
department of healthcare, or justice or public security? Each person will incur
an annual cost of 100,000 yuan (US$12,091)," says Wang.
Then there is the legal quandary. Many of them are incarcerated for minor
misdemeanors and the judge probably would not dole out long sentences. And those
who receive harsher sentences may become despondent and do something that might
harm themselves or those around them.
"It is a social issue that requires co-ordination from many agencies," says
the officer.
For the moment, authorities are putting a humanitarian touch on details.
They persuade the media not to publish the full name, image or identity of the
suspects, and keep vigilant of their state of mind. Even though the cost of
trying the cases is higher, "we'll be fair in sentencing; making it either
lighter or harsher is an insult to the defendants," said one court insider.
"The 'AIDS pickpockets' live on the periphery of society. They need our
care, not our discrimination. By caring for them, we're also caring for
ourselves," says Qin Huiqun, director of the disease control centre in Luzhai,
Guangxi.
Occupational hazard
If you think law enforcement agencies are over-sensitive, you need only
consider the case of Du Lianyi.
Last November the 29-year-old Beijing cop was bitten on the finger by a
drug dealer in a scuffle. The suspect tested positive for HIV. Du was told that
the chance of catching the virus through saliva was slim and was given
treatment.
In the next few months he tried to stay away from his family. When his wife
finally found out the truth, she said, teary-eyed: "You should have told me."
"I wouldn't deny that the mental pressure was crumbling," Du said a few
months later, still testing negative.
"In some other countries, people in my line of work are entitled to
psychological counselling. I just wish the experts would come up with some
methods to deal with AIDS-inflicted criminal elements.
"There's got to be a way that's both fair for them and good for the whole
society."
(China Daily) |