BEIJING, March 18 -- Beijing has started a
legislative programme for 2008 Olympic Games to ensure a safe sports gathering.
Two regulations, related to wireless communications
and the monitoring of public places, are in the pipeline.
The regulation on wireless frequency use and management aims to ensure the security of radio
communications by police and Olympic workers during the Games.
The second regulation is designed to enhance the
police's ability to observe public places, according to the Legal Affairs Office
of Beijing municipal government.
Kong Fanrong, an official in charge of drafting the
first regulation, said the use of radio frequencies in Beijing was "very
disordered" at present.
Even the radio navigation system used by the
capital's airport is sometimes disrupted by other radio waves from time to time.
Kong said the regulation will clean up the wireless
system and establish management guidelines and emergency plans.
A police officer with the Beijing Municipal Public
Security Bureau, who declined to be named, admitted that communication between
police officers could sometimes be picked up by wireless enthusiasts. But he
added: "Secret communications are coded and cannot be easily discerned."
Besides wireless security, enhanced monitoring in
public places is another major concern for the city's legislators, said Zhang
Guoqiang, an official with the city's legal affairs office.
According to the city's Olympic security plan, there
will be a vast computer surveillance network with tens of thousands of hidden
cameras in public places where large numbers of people gather, such as
supermarkets, public squares and sports venues.
(Source: China Daily)