Drug traffickers targeting China will soon face a new deterrent,
as a device to detect drugs hidden inside human bodies will be
recommended for nationwide use this year.
The X-ray detector, which has been used experimentally in
southwest China's Yunnan and Guizhou provinces since 2003 and
passed final appraisal last year, would be used at checkpoints
across the country, especially those along the borders, the
Ministry of Public Security told a press briefing yesterday.
Liu Shuo, deputy director of the ministry's science and
technology bureau, said the wide use of the detector might greatly
curb drug trafficking in China, as passenger pathways at border
checkpoints have become the main channel for trafficking.
Official figures show that more than half of the 117 kilograms
of heroin and drug-related chemicals seized by Chinese border
police in the first two months of this year had been found in
passengers' clothing or inside their bodies.
"Before the invention of the detector, it was very hard to find
drugs hidden inside human bodies, such as in the stomach,
intestines or vagina," Liu said. "We relied on experience and
manual checks, which easily made mistakes and caused disputes over
human rights.
"But the use of the new device in Yunnan has significantly
brought down such trafficking cases, and we hope it can be
installed at checkpoints across the country."
A policeman surnamed Li, who works at the Kunming Railway
Station, told China Daily that on average, they find four alleged
traffickers a day with the help of the detector.
Working similar to a medical fluoroscope, the detector uses
domestic innovative technology, said Luo Shanzhong, another bureau
official.
He said suspects stand in front of the detector, which can be
either fixed or portable, for only one minute before the results
are given.
"In accuracy, our products compare to any similar foreign
products," he said.
He added that the machine does almost no harm to human bodies,
as the X-ray emitted is about one-tenth of that emitted by regular
chest X-ray examination machines.
"And only suspects will be required to go through the check, not
everyone," he said.
So far, 62 detectors are in use at checkpoints in Yunnan and
Guizhou, the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Shanghai.
However, "we recommend that checkpoints install the device, but
it is not a must," Luo said.
Insufficient financial input is considered as the biggest
reason. "Checkpoints get money for new equipment from local
governments," he said. "Although a detector costs only 200,000 yuan
(US$24,700), some checkpoints in poor rural areas still cannot
afford it."
(China Daily April 7, 2006)
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