BEIJING, Feb. 7 (Xinhua) -- Beijing police say they
may force the city's drug addicts to attend the yearlong rehabilitation
programs as authorities recruit volunteers to keep tabs on drug-taking in the
city's night clubs and other public places.
"In 2007, the focus of police's anti-drug efforts
will shift from public (entertainment) venues to individual abusers," said Fu
Zhenghua, deputy director of the Beijing Public Security Bureau.
"We do not rule out the possibility of compelling all
drug abusers in the capital to give up their addictions before the Olympics," he
said.
The compulsory rehabilitation term for drug abusers
would be extended to one year from current half year, Fu said.
Beijing police will recruit anti-drug volunteers from
the staff of entertainment venue. Each venue will have at least five volunteers,
who will not only promote the city's anti-drug message but also report drug
abuse to police.
City authorities say the capital has about 26,000
registered drug abusers, 88 percent of them under 35. The abusers account
for0.18 percent of the city's total population of 14 million.
Last June, city police launched a special campaign,
involving 18,000 police officers, in a crack-down on drugs in the city's night
clubs, spas and karaoke bars last June.
Drug related crimes were discovered in 38
entertainment venues and 11 that their operating licenses suspended and three
shut down.
Fu said the capital reached its goal of wiping out
drug use in entertainment venues last year.
Entertainment venues that are found involved in drugs
will be heavily fined and closed for three to six months this year, according to
the bureau.
Owners of entertainment venues can be banned for life
from working in the industry if their establishments are found to be involved in
illegal drug activities, according to the city's narcotics control authorities.
The city's narcotics control authorities arrested
4,065 people on drug-related charges in the first 11 months last year and seized
249 kilograms of various drugs.
Beijing will also begin to use sniffer dogs to detect
drugs in public places, such as bus, subway and railway stations, shopping
malls, parks and theatres this year, according to the bureau.
According to the Ministry of Public Security, the
country has now 720,000 drug abusers. More than 200,000 drug addicts underwent
compulsory rehabilitation programs in the first eight months of last year.