BEIJING, April 6 -- The country's top
foreign-language college is to run training courses for police officers in
Beijing as part of the efforts to ensure a "language-barrier-free" Olympic
Games.
Beijing Foreign Studies University (BFSU), the oldest
of its kind in the country, yesterday inked a framework agreement with the
city's police bureau, promising to provide help both before and during the
Games.
The school agreed to set up a language-training
center on campus and hold regular classes. It said it would also help the bureau
to develop an online language course.
In return, the bureau said it will help the school
improve its campus safety education and recruit more BFSU graduates, especially
those majoring in languages other than English, whom it urgently needs.
Zhao Yuan, director of the bureau's training
department, told China Daily that the bureau might also employ 40 to 50
volunteers from BFSU to help answer emergency calls during the Games.
She said that while operators at the capital's 110
emergency headquarters can now handle calls in English, they are not skilled in
any other languages.
"Therefore, we hope we can get some help with
languages other than English, such as French, Portuguese, Japanese, Korean and
Arabic," she said.
She added that although emergency calls from
foreigners currently account for only a very small percentage of the total, this
is likely to increase sharply during the Olympics due to the large numbers of
visiting athletes and tourists.
"Many visitors will have difficulty communicating in
Beijing because of the language barrier. So, as the police, we should help
them," Zhao said.
Yang Xueyi, Party secretary of BFSU, described the
agreement as "win-win" situation.
"As school that teaches the largest number of foreign
languages in the country, we're glad to have the chance to make some
contribution to a safe and smooth Games," Yang said.
Beijing police introduced an English-language program
for its officers in 2001.
Bureau figures released yesterday show that some
23,000 of them about half the total have since received the Beijing Oral English
Certificate.
Zhao said that by the end of the year, about 60
percent of Beijing's police officers should have passed the test. She said that
during the Games, officers who are fluent in languages will be deployed in
places where foreigners gather.
(Source: China Daily)