Firearms training for SWAT in Beijing
BEIJING’S security chief has called for more firearms training for SWAT officers patrolling the city.
China’s Vice Minister of public security and head of Beijing Public Security Bureau Fu Zhenghua on Saturday urged officers to make sure that they are ready to “deal a deadly blow to enemies at the critical time.”
Fu asked them to be well prepared and maintain stability in the city, as he visited police stations and SWAT checkpoints along Beijing’s main drag, Chang’an Avenue on Saturday.
In October 2013, Xinjiang separatists drove a vehicle into the crowd in Tian’anmen Square, killing five people and injuring 40. In November, the APEC Leaders Summit is scheduled to take place in a new complex in a rural part of Beijing.
Chinese police generally do not carry firearms. Gun crime is very rare in a nation where gun controls are strict, but facing escalating security threats, armed police have been patrolling Beijing’s major subway stations and crowded areas since May.
In March, China’s security watchdog launched a program to train more officers in firearm use.
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