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BEIJING, Dec. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- More than one million citizens in Beijing, China's capital, may encounter a "no identification" situation as their first-generation ID cards are set to expire by New Year's Day and a second-generation card has yet to be applied for.
The Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau, which
is in charge of distributing the second-generation ID cards in the city,has
decided to introduce a series of measures to help achieve smooth and efficient
card exchange transactions for these people.
These measures include offering makeshift
second-generation cards and conducting ID card distribution services on weekends
andworkday evenings, the bureau said.
According to China's law on ID cards, citizens have
to produce the cards in certain circumstances, including marriage registration,
traveling by air, checking in at hotels and opening a bank account.
The new second-generation, computer chip-managed ID
cards, first launched in Beijing, Shanghai and Suzhou in March 2004, willbe
officially distributed nationwide in 2005 to replace the existing ID card that
is made from paper and wrapped in a transparent plastic coating.
About 1.5 million second-generation ID cards have
been made, 1.2 million of which have been distributed as of Dec. 20 this year in
Beijing. First-generation ID cards will be put out of production and
distribution beginning on Jan. 1, 2005, the bureau said.
Digital encryption technology is used in the new
cards in an effort to facilitate authentication and make counterfeiting even
more difficult.
The shift is expected to finish by the end of 2008,
and both cards will co-exist before the replacement is complete.
So far, more than 1.3 billion ID cards have been
issued by China's public security bureaus across the country. About 900 million
residents currently hold the cards. Enditem
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