日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区


Fingerprint Database Proposed

Let your fingers do the work that's the plan some lawmakers have drawn up in efforts to make society safer through a national fingerprint database.

Liu Litao, 10th National People's Congress (NPC) deputy and public security bureau chief in the city of Xinyi, Jiangsu Province, proposed to build a national fingerprint database to enhance the police's performance in fighting crime.

"As a policewoman with 20 years' experience, I have intimate understanding of the importance of fingerprints in investigations," she told China Daily. "But the size of existing fingerprint databases is too limited."

Nearly every province in China now has a local fingerprint database, but they are not interlinked nationwide and the records are limited to criminal suspects and unverified fingerprints collected at the scene, according to Liu.

She also cited a recent case she handled to demonstrate the power of a fingerprint database.

On February 1, the police in Xinyi found a body off the highway in the suburb, and from the traces left on the neck, Liu and her colleagues tentatively inferred it could be a driver strangled by someone who sat behind, dumped the body and drove the vehicle to flee.

But finding out the victim's identity turned out to be tough. The Xinyi police failed to find a matching fingerprint record in the city's database and the 50,000 notices they posted in neighboring townships and villages got no response after two days.

"Almost desperate, we decided to try the provincial database," said Liu. "If that doesn't work, we'll have to spend a lot of money to put notices in newspapers."

Fortunately, the police got a matching record in the provincial database, as the victim was fingerprinted sometime for his involvement in a gambling case. After the identity was uncovered, the police soon found his workplace and the license plate number of his car. They then tracked down to two suspects in the neighboring Shandong Province on February 9, eight days after the body was found.

"It would not have been that lucky had the victim not been fingerprinted," said Liu

A national fingerprint database will save "countless money and time" in investigative jobs and thus enhance the public's security, she said. "Moreover, it would facilitate many business and public administration affairs such as banking, personal credit profiling, social security and examinations."

Liu said now would be a good time to expand the database as citizens are renewing the identity cards the government has just introduced.

But she is also aware that it would take a greater police budget as well as law revisions before every citizen can get fingerprinted.

Moreover, fingerprinting is only mandatory for criminal suspects under the law, while the police can not force citizens to be fingerprinted. It would arouse civil rights concerns to implement mandatory fingerprinting without authorization of the law, Liu said.

"I hope the national fingerprint database can be done step by step amid improvements to the law as well as the public's understanding."

(China Daily March 14, 2006)


Print This Page E-mail This Page Return To Home

Copyright ? China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000

主站蜘蛛池模板: 增城市| 灌阳县| 北票市| 湄潭县| 西充县| 万荣县| 葫芦岛市| 布拖县| 红原县| 泰安市| 内乡县| 建瓯市| 宁国市| 三都| 崇文区| 临朐县| 阿尔山市| 贡嘎县| 通州区| 枝江市| 城步| 平潭县| 安福县| 八宿县| 客服| 新绛县| 铜川市| 琼海市| 日喀则市| 黄平县| 会东县| 长兴县| 盖州市| 宁陕县| 拉萨市| 嵊州市| 双桥区| 文山县| 舒兰市| 杭州市| 韶山市|